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Dive into the research topics where Marco Materazzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Marco Materazzi.


Physics and Chemistry of The Earth Part A-solid Earth and Geodesy | 1999

Influence of climatic changes on freshwater travertine deposition: a new hypothesis

F Dramis; Marco Materazzi; G. Cilla

Abstract Observations made in different parts of the world on freshwater travertine deposits show that in most cases their formation started during the Early Holocene and generally came to an end, or underwent a strong decline, in the Post-Atlantic. A similar trend seems to have also characterised the previous warm stages (Interglacials and Interstadials) of the Quaternary. A satisfactory explanation of this decline is not yet available even though different hypotheses have been proposed by several authors: some of them point out the influence of climatic changes, while others invoke the effects of human impact. However, no specific reference has been made to a possible role of groundwater temperature changes, notwithstanding their well-known influence on the calcium carbonate dissolution equilibrium. In particular, differences between lower temperature of ground waters (influenced by deep penetration into the limestone bedrock of Late Pleistocene surface temperatures) and the higher external temperature at the spring may have played an important role. The infiltrating waters, enriched in CO2 by percolating through the newly formed soils, acquired higher CaCO3 dissolution capacity because of underground temperatures being colder by several °C. The higher temperatures at the emergence, in conjunction with algal-bacterial activity, may have caused loss of CO2 and travertine deposition. This process may have continued for a long time because of the low thermal capacity of the limestone bedrock, where ground water circulated through fissures and channels within large volumes of dry rock, and the progressive increase of atmospheric temperature during Lower-Middle Holocene.


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2017

Analysis of mountain springs discharge time series in the Tennacola stream catchment (central Apennine, Italy)

Marco Giacopetti; Marco Materazzi; Gilberto Pambianchi; Kristijan Posavec

The mountain portion of the Tennacola stream basin, which is located in the northeast sector of the Sibillini Mountains (Central Apennines, Italy), has a large number of springs exploited for drinking water. The presence of lithotypes with different hydraulic conductivity allowed the formation of two main groups of springs with different discharge and regime. This paper aims to provide new insights about the groundwater circulation within carbonate and karst complexes. In detail a study based on spring hydrograph analysis using the MRC method and on the main statistical parameters has been carried out, in order to evaluate the main features related to the flow paths and the main hydrogeological properties of the aquifers studied. The results allowed to characterize the main hydrogeological features of the aquifers and to evaluate the dimension of the recharge areas.


Bollettino Della Societa Geologica Italiana | 2016

Groundwater recharge estimation using spring hydrographs: the case of the Tennacola carbonate aquifer (central Apennine, Italy)

Kristijan Posavec; Gilberto Pambianchi; Marco Materazzi; Domenico Aringoli; Marco Giacopetti

The recharge of an aquifer is fundamental to evaluate the availability of the resource and for planning its use over the time.In general, indirect methods are widely used, because these are based on the rainfall, evapotranspiration and runoff data. These three parameters are not always simple to evaluate in relation to the possible presence of errors in the available data, malfunction of instruments or difficulty to make a monitoring in relation to the complexity of the area, with consequent uncertainty on the results. In such situations, the use of a direct method could be useful to estimate more accurately the aquifer recharge.A common direct method is based on the analysis of the spring hydrographs, i.e. the discharge monitored at the spring. In this work, a spring hydrograph from the central Apennines of Italy has been analysed in order to estimate the average recharge value feeding the aquifer.


Archive | 2013

DSGSDs Induced by Post-Glacial Decompression in Central Apennine (Italy)

Domenico Aringoli; Bernardino Gentili; Marco Materazzi; Gilberto Pambianchi; Nicola Sciarra

During the last 30 years of studies in the field of mass movements located in the calcareous-marly and marly-sandy Apennines (Umbria-Marches and Latium-Abruzzi regions), over to a large number of landslides with different dimensions, even a lot of deep-seated gravitational slope deformations (DSGSDs) have been recognized and analysed. These phenomena are also located in that sector of central Italy affected by a cold climate during the past and actually temperate (central Apennine chain).


Ground Water | 2017

Method and Excel VBA Algorithm for Modeling Master Recession Curve Using Trigonometry Approach

Kristijan Posavec; Marco Giacopetti; Marco Materazzi; Steffen Birk

A new method was developed and implemented into an Excel Visual Basic for Applications (VBAs) algorithm utilizing trigonometry laws in an innovative way to overlap recession segments of time series and create master recession curves (MRCs). Based on a trigonometry approach, the algorithm horizontally translates succeeding recession segments of time series, placing their vertex, that is, the highest recorded value of each recession segment, directly onto the appropriate connection line defined by measurement points of a preceding recession segment. The new method and algorithm continues the development of methods and algorithms for the generation of MRC, where the first published method was based on a multiple linear/nonlinear regression model approach (Posavec et al. 2006). The newly developed trigonometry-based method was tested on real case study examples and compared with the previously published multiple linear/nonlinear regression model-based method. The results show that in some cases, that is, for some time series, the trigonometry-based method creates narrower overlaps of the recession segments, resulting in higher coefficients of determination R2 , while in other cases the multiple linear/nonlinear regression model-based method remains superior. The Excel VBA algorithm for modeling MRC using the trigonometry approach is implemented into a spreadsheet tool (MRCTools v3.0 written by and available from Kristijan Posavec, Zagreb, Croatia) containing the previously published VBA algorithms for MRC generation and separation. All algorithms within the MRCTools v3.0 are open access and available free of charge, supporting the idea of running science on available, open, and free of charge software.


Geologica Carpathica | 2017

Pliocene-Pleistocene geomorphological evolution of the Adriatic side of central Italy

Bernardino Gentili; Gilberto Pambianchi; Domenico Aringoli; Marco Materazzi; Marco Giacopetti

Abstract This work is a significant contribution to knowledge of the Quaternary and pre-Quaternary morphogenesis of a wide sector of central Italy, from the Apennine chain to the Adriatic Sea. The goal is achieved through a careful analysis and interpretation of stratigraphic and tectonic data relating to marine and continental sediments and, mostly, through the study of relict limbs of ancient landscapes (erosional surfaces shaped by prevailing planation processes). The most important scientific datum is the definition of the time span in which the modelling of the oldest morphological element (the “summit relict surface”) occurred: it started during Messinian in the westernmost portion and after a significant phase during middle-late Pliocene, ended in the early Pleistocene. During the middle and late Pleistocene, the rapid tectonic uplift of the area and the climate fluctuations favoured the deepening of the hydrographic network and the genesis of three orders of fluvial terraces, thus completing the fundamental features of the landscape. The subsequent Holocene evolution reshaped the minor elements, but not the basic ones.


RENDICONTI ONLINE DELLA SOCIETÀ GEOLOGICA ITALIANA | 2016

Application of the MRC method to the study of some mountain springs in the Tennacola stream catchment (central Apennine, Italy)

Marco Giacopetti; Marco Materazzi; Kristijan Posavec; Gilberto Pambianchi

The study concerns part of the plain sector of Aosta Valley (NW Italy). The investigated area is located between the cities of Sarre-Gressan and Pollein-Saint Christophe and is characterized by the presence of hexavalent chromium in the main shallow unconfined aquifer. The pollution is probably related to the negative environmental effects induced by the industrial steel production that since 1915 is present over the area. Since 1990 the industrial area was subjected to a number of direct investigations aimed to assess the contamination intensity. A preliminary remediation activity has been developed in last decades but the contaminants have been still observed in the groundwater monitoring network. This study highlights the set-up of a groundwater conceptual and numerical model of the shallow aquifer aimed to better understand and analyze the transport dynamics of hexavalent chromium in the local aquifer. The simulation is performed using the specific finite element software Feflow for groundwater flow and mass transport modeling. The hydrogeological setting of this area is related to the different sedimentary glacial, lacustrine and fluvial processes which characterized the bottom of the Aosta valley during the Quaternary. The shallow 80m-width aquifer is constituted by sandy to gravelly deposits and presents rare silty lens while its bottom is characterized by a decametric lacustrine silty level. The main aims of the numerical model are to give a more unequivocal explanation of the origin of the contamination and to support the predictive analyses in order to design an efficient site remediation for soil and groundwater. This represents a fundamental task in order to preserve the safety of the public water uses supplied by the aquifer. The preliminary hypothesis about the source of contaminations are still uncertain and referred to different scenarios that have to be further investigated by comparing monitoring data and transient flow simulation conditions.


Bollettino Della Societa Geologica Italiana | 2016

Hazard assessment of a complex landslide: the case of Vestea (Abruzzo, Italy)

Domenico Aringoli; Mattia Ippolito; Nicola Sciarra; Bernardino Gentili; Marco Materazzi; Gilberto Pambianchi

This short note aims to reconstruct the geomorphological hazard scenarios connected to the complex landslide that insists on the territory of Vestea (Civitella Casanova Municipality, in the province of Pescara, Italy). The landslide, active for several decades, probably since the XIX century, is located along a wide valley and starting from its head. It manifests frequently local reactivations with varying movement typology; while total reactivations, taking place in concomitance of particular climate and hydrogeological factors, are more rare.


Archive | 2015

Deep Seated Gravitational Slope Deformations and Large Landslides Interfering with Fluvial Dynamics; Examples from Central Apennines (Italy)

Marco Materazzi; Domenico Aringoli; Gilberto Pambianchi; Bernardino Gentili; Marco Giacopetti

The study, developed over a wide mountain sector of the central Apennines (Italy), highlights the role of Deep Seated Gravitational Slope Deformations (DSGSD) in the evolution of a mountain portion of the Chienti river valley. Radiocarbon dating and geomorphological considerations, testify that a lateral spreading, developed on a large scale, has triggered large landslides in correspondence of the thalweg. These phenomena have repeatedly dammed the river bed (certainly since the end of the late Pleistocene) creating temporary lakes which lasted also for a long time. The high seismicity and the persistence of conditions favorable to the development of gravitational phenomena, in an area currently occupied by an important communication route, attest to the high degree of risk present in this sector of the Apennine.


Archive | 2015

Geomorphological Hazard in Hypogeum Karst Touristic Landscape: An Example from Frasassi Cave (Central Italy)

Piero Farabollini; Domenico Aringoli; Marco Materazzi; Gilberto Pambianchi

The study of geomorphological hazards in tourist areas has been addressed only recently, mostly because in areas of high touristic value any risk for excursionists or for simple nature lovers represents a strong conditioning factor to the fruition and therefore to the economy of an entire area. The geomorphological hazard can turn into a considerable risk, if one takes into account the increasing human pressure even in remote areas. The development of tourism, in fact, brings an increasing number of people to discover and attend both areas prone to hazards for some time, both in areas where these hazards are being increased. The complexity and multiplicity of these changes require necessarily a greater attention not only for a correct comprehension of natural phenomena but mostly for their possible interactions with tourism attendance and fruition. Based on previous experiences, also as a result of research projects funded by the Italian Ministry for the University and the Research (MIUR). A study on the natural hazards related to the touristic fruition in the area of Frasassi Cave in the Marche region (central Italy) is following presented.

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Carlo Bisci

University of Camerino

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Tommaso Piacentini

University of Chieti-Pescara

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M Buccolini

University of Chieti-Pescara

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