Why scientists are excited about Italy's volcanoes
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Why scientists are excited about Italy's volcanoes

Saturday, Aug 8, 2026
5:00 PM - 7:30 PM | Europe/Kiev

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As volcanic activity continues at Mount Etna, Chris Baraniuk explores why Mount Etna and Mount Stromboli are becoming more lively.The top of the volcano exploded, sending a gigantic column of ash four or five kilometres (2.5-3 miles) into the sky. Mount Stromboli, off the north coast of Sicily, is one of the most active volcanoes in the world. On 11 July, it produced a paroxysm – a term in geology for a type of powerful eruption that interrupts a period of milder volcanic activity. In the villages nestled around the foot of the volcano, warning sirens blared.The paroxysm occurred shortly after 2pm local time and news of the event quickly began to spread online. Shortly after the explosion, two dozen or so volcanologists around Europe were due to attend one of their regular meetings. Chiara Maria Petrone, a volcano petrologist at the Natural History Museum in the UK, joined the session online."We started the meeting just an hour after the paroxysm," she recalls. "It was really exciting."Immediately, the scientists began bringing each other up to speed. Some shared real-time data from seismometers and other instruments. A few attendees even happened to be on the island of Stromboli at the time, according to Petrone, meaning they were able to describe what they were seeing. "It was all just happening at that moment," says .

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The Stromboli paroxysm earlier this summer

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Stromboli and Etna are among the best-studied volcanoes in the world. Reports of their eruptions date back centuries. Today, both peaks bristle with sensors that listen to the vibrations these angry giants produce. The two volcanoes are also frequently photographed by thermal cameras, drones and satellites. Some of this information feeds into experimental early warning systems, which try to predict strong eruptions shortly before they occur. But these volcanoes are also changing all the time, and there are signs that violent paroxysms at Stromboli could become more frequent.

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