Showing posts with label Yellowstone Caldera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yellowstone Caldera. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Death By SUPERVOLCANO

The Weather Channel The Weather Channel


   



Published on Jan 6, 2014
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Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Yellowstone Park's Massive Underground Volcano is Bigger Than We Thought


 


First Posted: Apr 18, 2013 04:07 PM EDT

Yellowstone
When volcanoes erupt, silica-rich magma can burst through the Earth's crust, burning the surrounding area in a massive explosion. Now, it turns out that this magma can lurk in Earth's upper crust for hundreds of thousands of years without triggering an eruption. (Photo : Flickr/Don Graham)
Yellowstone has the world's largest collection of geysers, and it has the underground plumbing to prove it. Scientists have announced that the volcanic activity beneath the National Park's surface may be far bigger and better connected than once thought.

The National Park is home to hot springs, mudpots, fumaroles and geysers, so it's not surprising that it has quite a bit of volcanic activity under the ground. Known as a hotspot, a massive volume of molten magma is located beneath Yellowstone. This plume of superheated rock rises from Earth's mantle, punching through the continent's crust as North America has slowly drifted over it. The phenomenon has left a trail of calderas created by massive volcanic eruptions in its wake; the most recent occurred about 640,000 years ago.
Yellowstone is infamous for its potential for a "super eruption." When the Huckleberry Ridge eruption in Yellowstone occurred about 2 million years ago, it darkened the skies with ash from southern California to the Mississippi River. It was one of the largest eruptions to have occurred on our planet. Understanding the volcanic activity of this location is therefore crucial for predicting future eruptions.

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nature.com


Large magma reservoir gets bigger


But earthquakes, not eruptions, are Yellowstone's most serious geological risk.




 

The reservoir of molten rock underneath Yellowstone National Park in the United States is at least two and a half times larger than previously thought. Despite this, the scientists who came up with this latest estimate say that the highest risk in the iconic park is not a volcanic eruption but a huge earthquake.

Yellowstone is famous for having a ‘hot spot’ of molten rock that rises from deep within the planet, fuelling the park’s geysers and hot springs1. Most of the magma resides in a partially molten blob a few kilometres beneath Earth’s surface.

New pictures of this plumbing system show that the reservoir is about 80 kilometres long and 20 kilometres wide, says Robert Smith, a geophysicist at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. “I don’t know of any other magma body that’s been imaged that’s that big,” he says.

Smith reported the finding on 27 October at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Denver, Colorado.

Yellowstone lies in the western United States, where the mountain states of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho converge. The heart of the park is a caldera — a giant collapsed pit left behind by the last of three huge volcanic eruptions in the past 2.1 million years.

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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Earthquake 3.6 Magnitude - State of Wyoming, [Yellowstone National Park, near the Old Faithful geyser] : UPDATE 9/23/2013

Earth Watch Report  -  Earthquakes

File:Yellowstone Nationalpark3.jpg
Image Source  :  Wikimedia . Org
Yellowstone National park
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bild:Yellowstone_Nationalpark.jpg by Huebi
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EarthquakeUSAState of Wyoming, [Yellowstone National Park, near the Old Faithful geyser]Damage levelDetails
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Description
A small earthquake struck in Yellowstone National Park near the Old Faithful geyser on Sunday, but even the seismic shaking could not stop the trusty waterspout. The U.S. Geological Survey said that a 3.6 magnitude earthquake struck at Yellowstone, centered close to six miles away from the geyser Old Faithful. The quake was part of a series of more than 100 tremors in the park since last Tuesday. While Sunday’s was the strongest, a number of other earthquakes have been felt by Yellowstone visitors. “A total of 130 earthquakes of magnitude 0.6 to 3.6 have occurred in these three areas, however, most have occurred near the Lower Geyser Basin,” park officials noted. “Notably, much of the seismicity in Yellowstone occurs as swarms. The University of Utah Seismograph Stations continues to monitor Yellowstone earthquakes and will provide additional information if the earthquake swarm activity increases.” The park has been in the news a bit this summer. In June a norovirus outbreak infected at least 100 visitors, leading to allegations that visitors were not being properly warned of the outbreak. “Hundreds of signs in Yellowstone warn motorists to not harm wild animals, but not a single sign warning human beings of a huge outbreak of the norovirus is present,” park visitor Louis Greenwald told The Inquisitr. The Yellowstone earthquake did not seem too much an inconvenience to the park’s visitors. A live video feed the National Park Service has set up to show Old Faithful showed several hundred of onlookers watching it erupt later in the day.
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Updated:Monday, 23 September, 2013 at 03:34 UTC
Description
It was recently reported that a very rare triple swarm of earthquakes rocked Yellowstone National Park. In fact, Bob Smith, a geophysics professor out of the University of Utah, says he has never seen even two swarms occur together before in all the 53 years that he has been monitoring seismic activity. Now, he he's seen three. An earthquake swarm, seismologists say, is an event where a sequence of earthquakes occurs in a limited geographic area over a short period of time. Speaking about the event, Smith called it "remarkable," asking, "How does one swarm relate to another? Can one swarm trigger another and vice versa?" No answers are available to Smith's questions, however, because simultaneous swarms haven't been detected before. Smith says he believes that at least two of the swarms are probably related to each other though. The three swarms hit in the following areas: Lewis Lake, the Lower Geyser Basin and the northwest part of Norris Geyser Basin.Earlier this month, on September 15, the largest earthquake to rock Yellowstone in over a year occurred about six miles north of the Old Faithful Geyser. Its magnitude was about 3.6 at its epicenter. It takes a magnitude of about 3.0 for people to feel it, a Yellowstone representative named Al Nash told the Jackson Hole News and Guide. The recent swarms of earthquakes began on September 10 and finished up on September 16. The University of Utah put out a statement saying that altogether 130 earthquakes with magnitudes ranging from 0.6 to 3.6 occurred in the area, with most of them being located in the Lower Geyser Basin. But, including many smaller events which were not detected, there were many more quakes than this. The recent swarms produced four earthquakes which, although they were not large, were significant enough in size to be felt. The first, which had a magnitude of 3.5, happened on September 13, about 17 miles northeast of West Yellowstone, Montana. The next two tremblors to be felt occurred early on the morning of September 15 with magnitudes of 3.2 and 3.4 respectively. These two occurred in rapid succession, with one being detected at 5:10 AM and the other at 5:11 AM. The quakes happened about 15 miles southeast of West Yellowstone. The largest earthquake recording during the swarm, a 3.6, was measured nearby about 4 1/2 hours later.According to Nash, a strong enough earthquake, like the 7.3-7.5 quake that shook the Hebgen Lake area in 1959, has the potential to change the activity of the geysers in the area. And, in fact the 1959 quake did. It caused nearly 300 features to erupt, included 160 where there were no previous records of geysers. None of the current earthquakes were powerful enough to create these types of changes, however. Smith says he believes that the current swarms of earthquakes may, in fact, be related to the 1959 earthquake. "We think that much of the seismicity is still aftershocks from that event in 1959. It can go on for hundreds of years." Usually only about half a dozen earthquakes occur each year in Yellowstone, Smith noted, so it is quite unusual for this level of swarm activity to rock the park.
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The Billings Gazette

Swarm of earthquakes shake Yellowstone

September 22, 2013 9:22 am  • 
JACKSON, Wyo. — Until recently, Bob Smith had never witnessed two simultaneous earthquake swarms in his 53 years of monitoring seismic activity in and around the Yellowstone Caldera.
Now, Smith, a University of Utah geophysics professor, has seen three swarms at once.
“It’s very remarkable,” Smith said. “How does one swarm relate to another? Can one swarm trigger another and vice versa?”
Because concurrent swarms have never been detected in the past, the answers aren’t in yet, Smith said. The geophysicist said he “wouldn’t doubt” if at least two of the events were related.
Temblors from the three quake swarms mostly hit in three areas: Lewis Lake, the Lower Geyser Basin and the northwest part of Norris Geyser Basin.
The largest earthquake shook the ground near Old Faithful Geyser on Sept. 15.
The epicenter of the magnitude 3.6 quake, the largest in Yellowstone in about a year, was just 6 miles to the north of Old Faithful.

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