“…The reconstruction of the dike geometry based on structural and field data indicates an average thickness of 5 m in the lower part and >25 m in some segments of the middle part, with an average thickness of ∼20 m (Figures 6m and 6n). Compared to other examples of magmatic dikes worldwide, from the Italian volcanoes of Etna (1.9 m, Scudero et al., 2019) and Somma‐Vesuvius (1.2 m, Porreca et al., 2006), the Mijakejima island (Japan, 1.3 m, Geshi & Oikawa, 2014), the Icelandic East Rift zone (4 m, Gudmundsson, 1983) and Askja volcano (0.8 m, Trippanera et al., 2018), the Oslo Rift (Norway, <2 m, Poppe et al., 2020), the Timna Igneous Complex (Israel, 1.5–32 m, Baer et al., 1994), and the Santorini island (Greece, 2–10 m, Drymoni et al., 2022), the thickness of TSF dike is well above the average. The only comparable cases are those from the East Rift and Timna Igneous Complex, which however exceed 3 and 1 km in length, respectively, whereas the exposed TSF dike is less than 1 km.…”