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Mofetta information


Mofetta with gas bubbles in Soos National Nature Reserve near Skalná, Czech Republic
Mofettas on the southeastern shore of the Laacher See, near Andernach, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany

Mofetta (Italian from Latin mephītis, a pestilential exhalation) is a name applied to a volcanic discharge consisting chiefly of carbon dioxide, often associated with other vapours, representing the final phase of volcanic activity. The Oxford Dictionary of English lists mofetta as an archaic term for the modern word fumarole.

The word is used in the plural as mofette, or, following the French fashion, mofettes. The volcanic vents yielding the emanations are themselves called mofette. They are not uncommon in Auvergne and in the Eifel, notably on the shore of the Laacher See; whilst other examples are furnished by the Grotta del Cane, near Pozzuoli, the Valley of Death in Java, the Death Gulch in the Yellowstone Park and the series of mofette in Romania's Harghita and Covasna counties.

Depending on the mineral content of the different vapours, mofette may be used for therapeutic purposes as well. As carbon dioxide is heavier than the air, patients can use it as dry spa, if certain safety regulations are complied with. The first known record about mofetta treatment for injuries is from the sixteenth century, by Paracelsus.

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Mofetta

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Mofetta (Italian from Latin mephītis, a pestilential exhalation) is a name applied to a volcanic discharge consisting chiefly of carbon dioxide, often...

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Fumarole

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ancient and extinct fumarole. Boiling Lake Cold seep Hydrothermal vent Mofetta Mudpot Mud volcano "fumerole – Definition and meaning". Merriam-Webster...

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Duvalo

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are released from the hole (therefore making it both a fumarole and a mofetta), and the smell of sulfur is said to be felt in a 3 kilometre radius around...

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Laacher See

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as the Pinatubo eruption of 1991. The volcanic discharge observable as mofettas on the southeastern shore of the lake are signs of dormant volcanism. The...

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Volcanic Eifel

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Mofettas on the southeastern shore of the Laacher See....

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Covasna

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550–600 m (1,800–1,970 ft). It is known for its natural mineral waters and mofettas. The town administers one village, Chiuruș (Hungarian: Csomakőrös). The...

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Ciomadul

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seismic activity, release of carbon dioxide from bubbling pools and bogs and mofettas and anomalous heat flow reaching 85–120 watts per square metre (0.0106–0...

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Malvizza mud volcanoes

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is purely sedimentary in nature, in contrast to volcanic phenomena like mofettas, fumaroles, and solfataras. The Malvizza mud volcanoes show some affinities...

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Wallenborn

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Wallender Born (“Wavy Spring”), known in the local speech as Brubbel, a mofetta whose spouting water comes from an underlying cold-water geyser. Saint...

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Geology of North Macedonia

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to the village of Kosel, near Lake Ohrid. It is both a fumarole and a mofetta, and during Ottoman times it was a sulfur mine. Katlanovo has thermal baths...

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