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Featured researches published by Ester Colizza.


Archive | 2014

Submarine Mass-Movements Along the Slopes of the Active Ionian Continental Margins and Their Consequences for Marine Geohazards (Mediterranean Sea)

Silvia Ceramicola; Daniel Praeg; Marianne Coste; Edy Forlin; Andrea Cova; Ester Colizza; Salvatore Critelli

The Ionian margins of Calabria and Apulia (IMCA) have been affected by mass movements of varying style, scale and age. Here we present examples of seabed and subsurface features identified along more than 400 km of the IMCA from multibeam seabed imagery and subbottom profiles acquired by OGS since 2005. Four different types of mass movement phenomena are recognized with expression at seabed and in the shallow subsurface: (1) mass transport complexes (MTCs) within intra-slope basins, (2) isolated slide scars (ISS) along open slopes, (3) slope-parallel sediment undulations (SPSU) recording block-rotations linked to fluid migration, and (4) headwall and sidewall scarps (HSC) in submarine canyons. Preliminary analyses of sedimentary processes suggest that both open-slope failures capable of triggering tsunamis and retrogression of canyon headwalls within 1–3 km of the Calabrian coast represent potential geohazards for coastal populations and offshore infrastructures.


Bulletin of Volcanology | 2015

Late Pleistocene-Holocene volcanic activity in northern Victoria Land recorded in Ross Sea (Antarctica) marine sediments

P. Del Carlo; A. Di Roberto; G. Di Vincenzo; Antonella Bertagnini; P. Landi; M. Pompilio; Ester Colizza; Guido Giordano

Eight pyroclastic fall deposits have been identified in cores of Late Pleistocene-Holocene marine sediments from the Ross Sea (Antarctica), and their components, granulometry and clast morphologies were analysed. Sedimentological, petrographic and geochemical analysis of clasts, with 40Ar-39Ar dating of alkali feldspar grains, indicate that during this period at least five explosive eruptions of mid to high intensity (plinian to subplinian) occurred, and that three of these eruptions took place from Mount Melbourne volcanic complex, between 137.1 ± 3.4 and 12 ka. Geochemical comparison of the studied tephra with micro- and crypto-tephra recovered from deep Antarctic ice cores and from nearby englacial tephra at Frontier Mountain indicates that eruptive activity in the Melbourne Volcanic Province of northern Victoria Land was intense during the Late Pleistocene-Holocene, but only a general area of provenance for the majority of the identified tephra can be identified.


Nature Communications | 2017

Holocene sea ice variability driven by wind and polynya efficiency in the Ross Sea

K. Mezgec; Barbara Stenni; Xavier Crosta; Valerie Masson-Delmotte; Carlo Baroni; M. Braida; V. Ciardini; Ester Colizza; Romana Melis; M. C. Salvatore; Mirko Severi; Claudio Scarchilli; Rita Traversi; Roberto Udisti; Massimo Frezzotti

The causes of the recent increase in Antarctic sea ice extent, characterised by large regional contrasts and decadal variations, remain unclear. In the Ross Sea, where such a sea ice increase is reported, 50% of the sea ice is produced within wind-sustained latent-heat polynyas. Combining information from marine diatom records and sea salt sodium and water isotope ice core records, we here document contrasting patterns in sea ice variations between coastal and open sea areas in Western Ross Sea over the current interglacial period. Since about 3600 years before present, an increase in the efficiency of regional latent-heat polynyas resulted in more coastal sea ice, while sea ice extent decreased overall. These past changes coincide with remarkable optima or minima in the abundances of penguins, silverfish and seal remains, confirming the high sensitivity of marine ecosystems to environmental and especially coastal sea ice conditions.Strong regional heterogeneity prevents thorough understanding of the recent increase in Antarctic sea ice. Here, analysis of marine and ice cores in the Western Ross Sea shows that late Holocene contrasting sea ice patterns between open and coastal areas are related to katabatic winds and polynya efficiency.


Antarctic Science | 2007

Pre-LGM open-water conditions south of the Drygalski Ice Tongue, Ross Sea, Antarctica

Furio Finocchiaro; Carlo Baroni; Ester Colizza; Roberta Ivaldi

Abstract A marine sediment core collected from the Nordenskjold Basin, to the south of the Drygalski Ice Tongue, provides new sedimentological and chronological data for reconstructing the Pleistocene glacial history and palaeoenvironmental evolution of Victoria Land. The core consists of an over consolidated biogenic mud covered with glacial diamicton; Holocene diatomaceous mud lies on top of the sequence. Radiocarbon dates of the acid insoluble organic matter indicate a pre-Last Glacial Maximum age (>24kyr) for the biogenic mud at the base of the sequence. From this we can presume that at least this portion of the western Ross Sea was deglaciated during Marine Isotope Stage 3 and enjoyed open marine conditions. Our results are consistent with recent findings of pre-Holocene raised beaches at Cape Ross and in the Terra Nova Bay area.


Chemosphere | 2017

Sea salt sodium record from Talos Dome (East Antarctica) as a potential proxy of the Antarctic past sea ice extent

Mirko Severi; Silvia Becagli; Laura Caiazzo; V. Ciardini; Ester Colizza; Fabio Giardi; K. Mezgec; Claudio Scarchilli; Barbara Stenni; Elizabeth R. Thomas; Rita Traversi; Roberto Udisti

Antarctic sea ice has shown an increasing trend in recent decades, but with strong regional differences from one sector to another of the Southern Ocean. The Ross Sea and the Indian sectors have seen an increase in sea ice during the satellite era (1979 onwards). Here we present a record of ssNa+ flux in the Talos Dome region during a 25-year period spanning from 1979 to 2003, showing that this marker could be used as a potential proxy for reconstructing the sea ice extent in the Ross Sea and Western Pacific Ocean at least for recent decades. After finding a positive relationship between the maxima in sea ice extent for a 25-year period, we used this relationship in the TALDICE record in order to reconstruct the sea ice conditions over the 20th century. Our tentative reconstruction highlighted a decline in the sea ice extent (SIE) starting in the 1950s and pointed out a higher variability of SIE starting from the 1960s and that the largest sea ice extents of the last century occurred during the 1990s.


The Future of the Italian Geosciences - The Italian Geosciences of the Future- 87° Congresso della Società Geologica Italiana e 90° Congresso della Società Italiana di Mineralogia e Petrologia | 2014

Polar marine diatoms: key markersfor Cenozoic environmental shifts. Sedimentary and paleo-environmental reportsfrom Antarctic continental margin (Ross Sea, Wilkes Land and Prydz Bay)

R. Tolotti; C. Bonci; Crosta; A. Caburlotto; Ester Colizza; Nicola Corradi; L. De Santis; David M. Harwood; Renata G Lucchi; E. Lodolo; G. Salvi

Lucchi, Renata G. ... et. al.-- 87° Congresso della Societa Geologica Italiana e 90° Congresso della Societa Italiana di Mineralogia e Petrologia, The Future of the Italian Geosciences - The Italian Geosciences of the Future, 10-12 September 2014, Milan, Italy.-- 1 pageThe Montellina Spring (370 m a.s.l.) represents an example of groundwater resource in mountain region. It is a significant source of drinking water located in the right side of the Dora Baltea Valley (Northwestern Italy), SW of Quincinetto town. This spring shows a morphological location along a ridge, 400 m from the Renanchio Torrent in the lower sector of the slope. The spring was investigated using various methodologies as geological survey, supported by photo interpretation, structural reconstruction, NaCl and fluorescent tracer tests, discharge measurements. This multidisciplinary approach, necessary due to the complex geological setting, is required for the importance of the Montellina Spring. It is interesting in the hydrogeological context of Western Alps for its high discharge, relatively constant over time (average 150 l/s), and for its location outside a fluvial incision and suspended about 40 m above the Dora Baltea valley floor (Lasagna et al. 2013). According to the geological setting, the hydrogeological reconstruction of the area suggests that the large amount of groundwater in the basin is essentially favoured by a highly fractured bedrock, covered by wide and thick bodies of glacial and gravitational sediments. The emergence of the water along the slope, in the Montellina Spring, is essentially due to a change of permeability between the deep bedrock and the shallow bedrock and/or surficial sediments. The deep bedrock, showing closed fractures and/or fractures filled by glacial deposits, is slightly permeable. The shallow bedrock, strongly loosened as result of gravitational phenomena, and the local gravitational sediments are, on the contrary, highly permeable. The concentration of water at the spring is due to several reasons. a) The spring is immediately downward a detachment niche, dipping towards the spring, that essentially drains the water connected to the change of permeability in the bedrock. b) It is along an important fracture, that carries a part of the losses of the Renanchio Torrent. c) Finally, it is favored by the visible and buried morphology. Although it is located along a ridge, the spring occurs in a small depression between a moraine and a landslide body. It also can be favored by the likely concave trend of buried base of the landslide. At last, tracer tests of the Renanchio Torrent water with fluorescent tracer are performed, with a continuous monitoring in the Montellina Spring. The surveys permit to verify and quantify the spring and torrent hydrogeological relationship, suggesting that only a small fraction of stream losses feeds the spring.


Global and Planetary Change | 2005

Record of the early Holocene warming in a laminated sediment core from Cape Hallett Bay (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)

Furio Finocchiaro; Leonardo Langone; Ester Colizza; Giorgio Fontolan; Federico Giglio; Eva Tuzzi


Marine Geology | 2017

A depositional model for seismo-turbidites in confined basins based on Ionian Sea deposits

A. Polonia; C.H. Nelson; S. Romano; Stefano Claudio Vaiani; Ester Colizza; G. Gasparotto; Luca Gasperini


Marine Geophysical Researches | 2011

Geomorphic setting and geohazard-related features along the Ionian Calabrian margin between Capo Spartivento and Capo Rizzuto (Italy)

Danilo Morelli; Angela Cuppari; Ester Colizza; Francesco Fanucci


Marine Geology | 2018

Seismic stratigraphy of the Central Basin in northwestern Ross Sea slope and rise, Antarctica: Clues to the late Cenozoic ice-sheet dynamics and bottom-current activity

Sookwan Kim; Laura De Santis; Jong Kuk Hong; Diego Cottlerle; Lorenzo Petronio; Ester Colizza; Young-Gyun Kim; Seung-Goo Kang; Hyoung Jun Kim; Suhwan Kim; Nigel Wardell; Riccardo Geletti; Andrea Bergamasco; Robert McKay; Young K. Jin; Sung-Ho Kang

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Barbara Stenni

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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K. Mezgec

University of Trieste

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