Faulty humor: Top Greek seismologist's volcano joke backfires
A view of the Amoudi Bay at Sunset, Oia, Santorini Island, Greece.


Imagine visiting Santorini and being told a huge "funnel" could open up under you? That's exactly what happened when one of Greece's top seismologists made an April Fool joke that didn't land quite as he intended. Now he's under investigation for causing a seismic disturbance.

Akis Tselentis, the director of Greece's Geodynamic Institute and Tsunami Center, last Wednesday posted on Facebook a photo of himself in a mock mugshot pose, holding a sign that read "guilty of April Fool's joke."

"We live in a country where humor is persecuted," he added.

On Tuesday, a prosecutor ordered a preliminary investigation to determine whether Tselentis' April 1 posting qualified as spreading false news.

"Things are not well regarding Santorini," Tselentis had said.

A vintage color lithograph from 1884 shows a submarine volcano on the Island of Santorini during the eruption of 1866. (Getty Images)

"From January onwards we have a gradual disappearance of magma beneath the volcano," the April Fool's post said.

Tselentis said there was a "major possibility" that magma would shift towards a fictional volcano, leaving a funnel vacuum that would "suck the waters of the Aegean."

Santorini was completely reshaped by a volcanic eruption in the late 17th century BCE that wiped out a culturally advanced Minoan colony, and geothermal activity accompanied by seismic tremors remains high to this day.

The last major eruption of the most active part of the volcano, beneath the uninhabited black lava islet of Kameni near Santorini, occurred in 1950.