Satellite-based reconstruction of the volcanic deposits during the december 2015 etna eruption

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Abstract

Satellite-derived data, including an estimation of the eruption rate, proximal volcanic deposits and lava flow morphometric parameters (area, maximum length, thickness, and volume) are provided for the eruption that occurred at Mt Etna on 6–8 December 2015. This eruption took place at the New Southeast Crater (NSEC), the youngest of the summit craters of Etna, shortly after a sequence of four violent paroxysmal events took place in 65 h (3–5 December) at “Voragine”, the oldest summit crater. Multispectral SEVIRI images at 15 min sampling time have been used to compute time-averaged eruption rate curves, while tri-stereo Pléiades images, at 50 cm spatial resolution, provided the pre-eruptive topography and topographic changes due to volcanic deposits. In addition to the two types of satellite data, other parameters have been inferred, such as probable vesicularity and pyroclastic deposits.

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Ganci, G., Cappello, A., Bilotta, G., Corradino, C., & Negro, C. D. (2019). Satellite-based reconstruction of the volcanic deposits during the december 2015 etna eruption. Data, 4(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/data4030120

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