The Vesuvius Observatory
"...we
have seized lightning from the skies, but what
lies just below us, the earth upon which we
tread, where we live and die, is still largely a
mystery to us. God forgive my presumption, but I
yearn to raise this dark veil,
though more vigorous hands than mine have
perished and been forced to recognise their
impotence”
[From
a
speech
given
by
the first director of the observatory, Macedonio
Melloni, at the
opening ceremonies in 1845.]
The observatory—now, officially,
the Vesuvius Observatory, Naples
Section of the National Institute of Geophysics and
Volcanology— is quite visible on the western
slopes of Vesuvius. It rests on Colle del Salvatore,
a knoll, putting it out of the range of ejecta and in
a position where lava from an eruption will be
channelled around the observatory and not through and
over it. It is the oldest such institution in Italy
and is still an active institution for important
research in geophysics and vulcanolgy. The observatory
is responsible for monitoring the volcano upon which
it rests as well as keeping tabs on other geological
happenings in the area, such as those involving the
nearby Phlegrean Fields and the island of Ischia.
In 1970 the original building was relegated to the
role of museum, exhibit hall, and library, and a new
building was constructed to meet the needs of modern
science. Directors of the observatory have included
perhaps the best-known Italian geologist, Giuseppe
Mercali (director from 1911-14), among whose
achievements was the descriptive system used to
classify earthquakes according to perceived effect on
the environment (a system since superseded in most
places by the Richter scale, a measurement of the
amount of energy released by a quake).
[Photo
by Herman Chanowitz;
restoration by
Tana A.
Churan-Davis.]
The literature published by the
observatory tells us that
"...there is a
shift system to ensure that two staff members
are always on duty at the Vesuvius Observatory.
These operators are responsible for checking
seismic developments of the Campania volcanic
areas...and for communicating to the authorities
any significant phenomena observed by the
seismic monitoring system, under permanent
observation."
This is good to know since hundreds of thousands of
people live in the immediate area described as the
"Red Zone", the area that will have to evacuated
when (not if) the time comes. A recent report from
32nd World Geological Conference in Florence essentially said that an explosive eruption
(not a slow, effusive, what-a-lovely-lava-flow!
eruption, but a true explosion) was just a matter of
time. The report decribed
Vesuvius as the world's most dangerous volcano and
warned that by 2100, Mount Vesuvius will certainly
repeat its most dramatic performance, the infamous
eruption of 79 A.D., which buried Pompeii.
Dramatic moments in the history of the Vesuvius
observatory have included an episode in 1872 in which
director, Luigi Palmieri,
stayed at his post during a large eruption in order to
make accurate observations for his science. That
eruption killed a group of students taken by surprise
by a sudden burst from a
cone on the northwest slope. Palmieri stayed while the
lava flowed dangerously close. He survived and
continued to edit his Vesuvius Observatory Annals, a
prestigious journal that he founded and edited until
his death in 1896. There was a powerful eruption in
April, 1906 and one in 1944 (photo), accurately
predicted, by the way, by the director at that time,
Giuseppe Imbò. He had been responsible for
adding the newest scientific tools at the observatory.
The institution continues to keep abreast of the
latest in geological monitoring techniques in order to
prepare as best as possible for whatever dramatic
events lie ahead.
[Also see this New York Times article from 1906,
praising the role of Raffaele Matteucci, the director
of the observatory during the powerful eruption of
that year.]
[Also see "Recent Eruptions
of Vesuvius."]
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