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1 Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica
e Vulcanologia
Osservatorio Vesuviano
80123 Naples, Italy
(V.N.,
G.S.)
2 Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica
e Vulcanologia
Roma 1
00143 Rome, Italy
(S.N.)
We investigate the complex propagation of seismic waves beneath the Campi
Flegrei caldera, Italy, using multichannel recordings of artificial explosions.
The sources consisted of air gun explosions shot in the Gulf of Pozzuoli at
offsets ranging between 3 and 7 km. A multichannel recording device was deployed
in the Solfatara crater and consisted of ten vertical-component and two
three-component short-period seismometers with a maximum aperture of about 150
m. The zero-lag correlation (ZLC) technique was adopted to estimate
horizontal slowness and backazimuth of coherent waves crossing the array. For
sources located in the northern sector of the Gulf, with maximum offset 5 km,
ray parameters and backazimuths are in agreement with those predicted for the 1D
velocity model used for routine locations. For sources at offsets larger than
5 km, the
ZLC curves depict prominent maxima associated with a secondary phase
propagating with a lower velocity than the first-arrival P wave. Using
finite-difference synthetic seismograms generated for a 2D realistic velocity
model, we explain these late arrivals in terms of a lateral velocity variation
located at depths of about 1 km. Such discontinuity would correspond to a
positive Vp anomaly imaged by a recent 3D tomographic study,
and interpreted as the submerged southern rim of Campi Flegrei caldera collapsed
during the explosive eruption of 12 ky B.P. The small spacing among
adjacent shot points allowed simultaneous wave-field decomposition at the source
and receiver arrays. Using a modified version of the double-beam method, we
retrieve the independent variation of horizontal slowness at both the source and
receiver regions. For both cases, we found azimuthal deviations as large as
50° with respect to
the great circle path. At the source region, these discrepancies may be
interpreted in terms of ray bending at the interface of the aforementioned
positive anomaly. At the receiver array, the observed anomalies may be
attributed to either velocity variations marking the Solfatara crater rim, or to
a near-receiver, low-velocity body whose position would coincide with negative
gravimetric anomalies and a high Vp/Vs
ratio region inferred by independent geophysical and seismological studies.
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