Magma Bubbles from Mt. Etna
			
		
		
			Credit & 
Copyright:  Marco Fulle 
(Stromboli online)
		
		
			Mt. Etna 
erupted spectacularly in 2001 June.  
Pictured above, the 
volcano 
was photographed expelling bubbles of hot magma, 
some of which measured over one meter across.  
One reason planetary geologists study Earth's 
Mt. Etna is because of its 
likely similarity to 
volcanoes on 
Mars.  
Mt. Etna, a basalt volcano, is composed of material similar to Mars, 
and produces similar 
lava
channels. 
Located in Sicily, 
Italy, Mt. Etna is not only one of the 
most active 
volcanoes on Earth, it is one of the 
largest, 
measuring over 50 kilometers at its base and rising 
nearly 3 kilometers high.