Life in Potenza

Charlie and I arrived in Potenza a week ago and are happily settled into our new home.  We really like living in the center of the historic old city, or “Centro Storico”. It is full of narrow winding cobble-stone paved streets with lots of small cafes and restaurants which we are still discovering. The breakfast pastries are delicious, and they make the best cappuccinos. At night people arrive from the surrounding areas to walk the streets and it gets quite active, especially on weekends. The Italian people are full of life and energy! They walk in pairs and small groups with a good deal of banter, laughter, and rapid fire conversation that we don’t understand.

On week days I walk down the hill to the University where I typically get lunch with Sergio. Today we discussed active faults, marine currents, and sedimentation in and around the Messina Strait. I asked Sergio to tell me about tidal processes in the area (one of his areas of expertise), and he created a classic geologist’s “sketch on a napkin” (on a paper placemat).  Messina Strait is the famous location where Homer’s Odysseus narrowly escapes the mythical monsters Scylla and Charybdis. These multi-headed man-eating creatures are believed to be depictions of whirlpools, reefs, and other hazards associated with exceptionally strong and unpredictable tidal currents in the fault-bounded narrow marine passage between the Ionian and Tyrrhenian seas.

Arrival in Potenza

Yesterday we arrived in the small hilltop city of Potenza!  The bus trip from Naples took us through incredible valleys and steep mountains capped with fresh snow. With the help of our AirB&B host, we moved into a super cute little apartment in the middle of the historic city center (centro storico). There are plenty of cafes and restaurants, a local food market with everything we need, and it’s a fairly short walk down the hill to the Universita Degli Studi Della Basilicata (also known as “Unibas”) where I am being hosted by Sergio Longhitano, a fabulous sedimentologist and professor at the university.  It is exciting to have this chance to work with Sergio and learn from him!

Ancient Roman Culture and Art

For the past two days Charlie and I have continued our travels back in time to the days of the Roman Empire ca. 2000 years ago.  Yesterday we spent most of the day in the National Archeology Museum which was amazing, and today we explored the ancient city of Herculaneum. I especially like the color mosaics constructed from thousands of tiny tiles assembled into beautiful images, the majestic marble and bronze sculptures in every corner, and the large tightly fitted paving stones in these ancient streets.

The eruption of Vesuvius buried Pompei and Herculaneum in the year 79 A.D.  Pliny the younger wrote “a black and dreadful cloud, broken with rapid zigzag flashes, revealed behind it variously shaped masses of flame … Soon afterwards, the cloud began to descend, and cover the sea. I looked back and a dense dark mist seemed to be following us, spreading itself over the country like a cloud.”  At Herculaneum we saw charred blackened wooden building beams, piles of metal coins that were welded together from the heat of the pyroclastic flow, and yes a few human bones. A vivid reminder of the destructive power of geologic processes!

 

Pompei

First full day in Naples, and of course we went to Pompei! A few pictures, too tired for many words. Excellent Day 1, looking forward to many more!

Travel Day

After a stressful wait outside our home at 4:00 am while the taxi was running late (ugh), we had a smooth trip to San Francisco and settled in to Joe & the Juice at SFO international for breakfast. No lack of things to do during a 5 hour layover!  I like long connections.  Charlie is taking a nap while I work. Google has released an urgent update for Chrome because of an evil new virus (CVE-2022-1096), which they assigned a “high severity rating”. This can be bad. If you use Chrome (I do), make sure you are running the latest version 99.0.4844.84 for Windows, Mac and Linux. Our next flight will be an 11 hour and 20 minute marathon to Munich.  That’s the news from Joe & the Juice!

Neotectonics of the Messina Strait

Hypothesis for a Migrating Conjugate Relay Zone in the Messina Strait, Southern Italy

(abstract submitted to the Tidalites Conference, early May, 2022: https://www.tidalites2022.it/)

1Dorsey, R.J.,2Longhitano, S.G., 3Chiarella, D.

(1) Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR (USA); (2) Department of Sciences, University of Basilicata, Potenza (Italy); (3) Department of Earth Sciences, Royal Holloway University of London (UK)

The Messina Strait (MS) is a modern, 3-km-wide tide-dominated passageway that separates the Italian peninsula from Sicily in the central Mediterranean Basin (Fig. 1A). The MS sits in a tectonically active region where seismogenic normal faults, sedimentary facies of Plio-Pleistocene deposits, and age of uplifted marine terraces provide a record of rapid extension and vertical crustal motions driven by southeastward rollback of the Calabrian subduction zone. Southern Calabria and northeast Sicily occupy a microplate bounded by active NW-striking strike-slip faults that mark the surface expression of growing tears in the subducting Ionian oceanic slab (Fig. 1A). Within this setting, large water masses of the Ionian and Tyrrhenian seas are compressed daily through the MS to produce horizontally-amplified tidal currents and a resulting wide range of erosional and depositional tidal processes (Longhitano, 2018). The bathymetric and geomorphic features of the MS are known to be tectonically controlled, yet their governing fault geometries and fault-kinematic processes remain poorly understood.

A review of published studies in southern Italy reveals a distinctive fault pattern that is best described as a conjugate relay zone (c.f. Childs et al., 2019), where displacement on opposed-dipping normal faults is transferred along-strike through a zone of overlapping extensional conjugate faults. The MS persists today within such a zone of overlap where strain is transferred from NW-dipping normal faults in southern Calabria to the SE-dipping Messina-Taormina normal fault offshore of northeast Sicily (Fig. 1B). The epicenter of the 1908 M 7.1 Messina earthquake is located roughly in the center of this relay zone. The narrow hook-shaped constriction at the northern exit of the MS is defined by pronounced plan-view curvature in facing conjugate normal faults that may reflect large strain gradients and local rotations near active fault tips in the locus of modern fault interactions, accommodated by slip on the offshore oblique-dextral Capo Peloro fault. Pleistocene marine terraces preserved at elevations up to 1.3 km asl in southern Calabria (Fig. 1B; Roda-Boluda and Whittaker, 2017; Antonioli et al., 2021, Meschis et al., 2022) record northwestward migration of normal faults in the past ~1 Myr. We speculate that a set of en-echelon normal faults at the eastern margin of the Messina Strait (west flank of Aspromonte Mts.) formed by northward migration of normal faults in response to NE-ward propagation of the Messina-Taormina fault (Fig. 1B). This hypothesis makes a number of testable predictions that could be evaluated in future work.  For example, if fault interactions in the relay zone control preferential directions of incoming and outgoing tidal flows, they may thus influence the asymmetric partitioning of modern depositional environments and help to explain observed differences in sedimentary deposits north and south of the narrow MS exit.

Getting Ready

Charlie and I are headed to Italy! This is a warm-up post. We will depart Eugene at 6:00 am this Wednesday (March 30) and will land in Naples mid-day March 31. We plan to visit Naples for 3 days and then move to Potenza where we will live for 3 months.  I will attend a conference focused on tidal depositional processes and deposits – “tidalites” – as well as pre- and post-meeting field trips. Check out the meeting web page: https://www.tidalites2022.it/. My host in Potenza, Sergio Longhitano, is a great sedimentologist. He is the driving force behind the Tidalites conference and I’m excited to learn from him in the field. 


Above: View looking east along Messina Strait at Capo Peloro. Photo Credit: Giuseppe Cosenza (from Google Earth).