Abstract
The 39.8 ka Campanian Ignimbrite (CI) is the largest caldera-forming
eruption of the Campi Flegrei during the Quaternary, which had a
global-scale impact on the environment and human populations. The
cooling following the eruption and the several effects of it strongly
affected the paleoenvironment and the migration of hominids in Europe.
The volume of the eruption is necessary to constrain the climate model
of this area in the past. However, despite a large number of studies,
the Dense Rock Equivalent (DRE) volume estimates range from 60 to 300
km. Here we present a review of the previous volume evaluations and a
new calculation of the volume of the ignimbrite. This estimate is
constrained by an isopach map that reconstructs the paleo-topography
during the eruption. The preserved total bulk extra-caldera volume of
the ignimbrite is estimated at 61.5 km ± 5.5 km. The total PDC deposit
volume is then corrected for erosion, ash elutriation, the intracaldera
deposit volume and the volume of tephra deposited in the sea. The total
final volume estimate of the eruption ranges from 164.9 km – 247.7 km
DRE. This value corresponds to a mass of 4.30 - 6.46 x 10 kg, a
magnitude (M) of 7.7 and a VEI of 7. This M makes the CI the
largest-magnitude Quaternary eruption in the Mediterranean area. The new
detailed estimation of CI eruption physical parameters confirms this
event as capable of having significantly affected human activity and the
environment on a large scale at the time of the eruption.