Prelude Seismic activity at Mount Etna began on 25 February 1669 and increased over the next two weeks. It reached its peak during the night of 10 and 11 March when earthquakes destroyed
Nicolosi. The seismic activity caused damage in
Gravina,
Mascalucia,
Pedara and
Trecastagni, and was felt as far away as Catania. A number of seismic events are reported in contemporaneous records but their timing and frequency are not known. Early activity that lasted until 9 March reflects the ascent of deep magma within the mountain while subsequent earthquakes were associated with the opening of the eruption fissure. These early events impacted a wider area than the later ones; earthquake activity diminished after the eruption had begun.
Eruption commences and events at the vent After midnight on 11 March, the first fissure opened up on Etna between the Monte Frumento Supino
cinder cone and Piano San Leo. This wide and long fissure between elevation was accompanied by weak eruptive activity at its upper end and an intense glow on its lower end. During the afternoon of the same day, a second fissure opened and erupted
lithics and ash clouds; historical records vary on the number of vents that became active. An alternative reconstruction of events envisages the development of several fissure segments between elevation, most of which underwent brief explosive and effusive eruptions. At 18:30, the main vent became active and lava began to flow from the second fissure from east of the Monte Salazara cone, close to Nicolosi, at elevation in Etna's southern
rift zone. A fifth fissure segment south of the Monpilieri cinder cone was briefly active on 12 March and several vents – sources disagree on the exact number – became active on 12 March around the main vent with
lava fountaining. The cinder cone developed over the main vent and was almost fully formed by 13 March.
Explosive eruption An
eruption column rose from the vent and deposited
tephra,
pyroclastics covered large parts of Etna's southeastern flank and ash from the eruption traveled as far as Calabria and Greece.
Strombolian and
lava fountaining took place, generating pyroclastics including
lapilli and
lava bombs, which fell over the southeastern flank for three months. These deposits reached a thickness of from the vent; roofs in
Acireale,
Pedara,
Trecastagni and
Viagrande collapsed under the weight of the tephra. Huge boulders were ejected to distances of several kilometers. Most of the tephra was produced within the first few days of the eruption. The explosive stages of the 1669 eruption produced of pyroclastics and have been classified as category 2–3 on the
Volcanic Explosivity Index, making it one of the most intense eruptions of Etna.
Subplinian eruptions on Etna's flanks are not common; other examples are the prehistoric eruptions of Monte Moio 28,600 ± 4,700 years ago, Monte Frumento delle Concazze 3,500 years ago and Monte Salto del Cane 3,000 years ago. Over three million tons of
sulfur were released by the eruption. This sulfur may have risen into the upper
troposphere, causing changes in the chemistry of the regional atmosphere and environmental hazards. The 1669 eruption, however, did not form a substantial atmospheric dust veil.
Lava flow Lava now flowed out of the volcano into a densely populated area at an average rate of , with a peak rate of . Lava emanating from the vent flowed around the Mompilieri/Monpilieri cinder cone and during 12 March destroyed the village of
Malpasso. The town of fell victim to the lava flows during the night and
Mascalucia was covered the day after. During and after 14 March, the lava flow branched out in three directions and began to advance southwards; the western branch destroyed villages close to Mascalucia, and houses around
Camporotondo and
San Pietro. After 15 March, the lava flow fronts began to slow down. The development of additional branches and of overlapping flows continued as
lava tubes formed in the flow. On 15–17 March
San Giovanni Galermo was partially destroyed, followed during the next week by agricultural land of Gravina. Between 26 and 29 March the same fate struck Camporotondo and San Pietro, and on 29 March
Misterbianco. Between 18 and 25 March the western and eastern branches of the lava flow stopped advancing and away from the vent, respectively. Almost a century after the eruption,
Sir William Hamilton reported the lava flows had shifted an otherwise undamaged vineyard by over . The southeastern branch of the flow, which was fed by
lava tubes and ephemeral vents, continued to advance and destroyed farms close to Catania. On 20 March, a branch of the lava flow approached the city and after ponding in and filling the
Gurna del Nicito lake, on the 1, 12 or 16 April, it reached the city walls about away from the vent. The walls deflected the lava flow southwards and after surrounding the
Castello Ursino on 23 April and obliterating the valley that surrounded it, the lava flow began entering the Ionian Sea as a -wide flow front. The city walls resisted the advancing lava for 15 days. Beginning on 30 April, some flows overtopped the walls and penetrated Catania, pushing aside weaker buildings and burying sturdier ones but did not cause much damage. Inside the city the flows advanced about . The 1669 eruption is the only historical eruption that impacted the urban area of Catania; other lava flows in the city are of prehistoric age and the presence of lava from the AD 252 eruption has been ruled out. Lava continued to flow into the sea, which was away from the vents, for two more months, and overlapping lava flows continued to form upstream yielding a complex
lava field. On 11 July 1669 lava ceased to flow and on 15 July the eruption was definitively over. The eruption lasted 122 days, making it one of the longest in the history of Etna. Even after the eruption ended, the lava flows were still hot enough to boil water for many months and it reportedly took eight years for the lava to cool. Puffs of gas would escape when rods were poked into the lava.
Events at the summit During the night of 24 March, a violent earthquake took place and was followed by activity on the main summit of Etna. The next day at 10:00 an explosive eruption occurred at the summit, and an "immensely high"
eruption column rose over the volcano. No caldera collapse took place on the volcano but
landslides affected the summit crater. There is disagreement between contemporaneous records that mention a collapse of the summit in 1669, those which do not, and 21st-century research that indicates there were no major changes in the morphology of the summit during the 1669 eruption. == Response ==