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Geologists reveal secrets behind supervolcano eruption
March 06, 2007
Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have discovered what likely triggered the eruption of a "supervolcano" that coated much of the western half of the United States with ash fallout 760,000 years ago. Using a new technique developed at Rensselaer, the team determined that there was a massive injection of hot magma underneath the surface of what is now the Long Valley Caldera in California some time within 100 years of the gigantic volcano's eruption. The findings suggest that this introduction of hot melt led to the immense eruption that formed one of the world's largest volcanic craters or calderas.
The research, which is featured in the March 2007 edition of the journal Geology, sheds light on what causes these large-scale, explosive eruptions, and it could help geologists develop methods to predict such eruptions in the future, according to David Wark, research professor of earth and environmental sciences at Rensselaer and lead author of the paper.
The 20-mile-long Long Valley Caldera was created when the supervolcano erupted. The geologists focused their efforts on Bishop Tuff, an expanse of rock that was built up as the hot ash cooled following the eruption. The researchers studied the distribution of titanium in quartz crystals in samples taken from Bishop Tuff.
A team from Rensselaer previously discovered that trace levels of titanium can be analyzed to determine the temperature at which the quartz crystallized. By monitoring titanium, Wark and his colleagues confirmed that the outer rims of the quartz had formed at a much hotter temperature than the crystal interiors. The researchers concluded that after the interiors of the quartz crystals had grown, the magma system was "recharged" with an injection of fresh, hot melt. This caused the quartz to partly dissolve, before starting to crystallize again at a much higher temperature.
Analyses of titanium also revealed that the high-temperature rim-growth must have taken place within only 100 years of the massive volcano's eruption. This suggests that the magma recharge so affected the physical properties of the magma chamber that it caused the supervolcano to erupt and blanket thousands of square miles with searing ash.
"The Long Valley Caldera has been widely studied, but by utilizing titanium in quartz crystals as a geothermometer we were able to provide new insight into the reasons for its last huge eruption," Wark said. "This research will help geologists understand how supervolcanoes work and what may cause them to erupt, and this in turn may someday help predict future eruptions."
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
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Supervolcano - It's Under Yellowstone. And It's Overdue.
Amidst the stunning wilderness of Yellowstone National Park, steam and hot water bubble and hiss from thousands of colorful, mineral-encrusted springs and vents. These hot springs, geysers and bubbling mud pools are all outward manifestations of a huge body of magma residing not far beneath the surface. It's a subterranean sea of molten lava that scientists are sure will burst through the Earth's crust it's just a question of when. And if the resulting super-volcanic eruption is anything like the last one on earth which plunged the world into darkness for six years, tipped us into the last Ice Age and reduced the human population to just 2,000 people we're in for one explosive ride.
Based on the predictions of top volcano experts and the detailed planning and evacuation strategies of...
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Supervolcano
by Supe John Savino (Author)
Approximately 75,000 years ago, an event occurred that almost wiped out human life. According to a stunning new theory, this singular event may also have completely altered the genetic evolution of humankind. It was an event that released 3,000 times the energy of Mt. St. Helens.
The new book, Supervolcano, explores this eruption of the Toba supervolcano in Sumatra, Indonesia, its far-reaching impact, and the strong possibility of another supervolcano eruption in our lifetime.
Supervolcanoes are considered one of the five biggest threats to humankind, along with asteroids, nuclear war, disease, and global warming. But of those, supervolcanoes are the only threat that cannot be prevented.
And their effects are catastrophic. So devastating was...
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Discovery Channel Supervolcano DVD It's Under Yellowstone. and It's Overdue
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Super Volcano: The Ticking Time Bomb Beneath Yellowstone National Park
by Greg Breining (Author)
Despite growing evidence of geothermic activity under America's first and foremost national park, it took geologists a long time to realize that there was actually a volcano beneath Yellowstone. And then, why couldn't they find the caldera or crater? Because, as an aerial photograph finally revealed, the caldera is 45 miles wide, encompassing all of Yellowstone. What will happen, in human terms, when it erupts? Greg Breining explores the shocking answer to this question and others in a scientific yet accessible look at the enormous natural disaster brewing beneath the surface of the United States. Yellowstone is one of the world's five "super volcanoes." When it erupts, much of the nation will be hit hard. Though historically Yellowstone has erupted about every 600,000...
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NOVA: Mystery of the Megavolcano
Starring: Stacy Keach; Peter Thomas (VI); Don Wescott Directed By: not listed
Scientists confront on an astounding possibility: that a single ancient cataclysmic volcanic eruption 75,000 years ago blasted ash and rock across an entire continent, spewing so much sulfuric acid into the atmosphere that Earth was plunged into a global
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![Supervolcano [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.2&4 Import - Great Britain ]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ZJ7YGAH3L._SL160_.jpg)
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Supervolcano [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.2&4 Import - Great Britain ]
Directed By: Tony Mitchell Also With: Adrian Holmes (Primary Contributor), Gary Lewis (Primary Contributor), Jane McLean (Primary Contributor), Jennifer Copping (Primary Contributor), Michael Riley (Primary Contributor), Rebecca Jenkins (Primary Contributor), Robert Wisden (Primary Contributor), Shaun Johnston (Primary Contributor), Susan Duerden (Primary Contributor), Tom McBeath (Primary Contributor), CategoryAsia (Commentary), CategoryCentralEurope (Commentary), CategoryCultFilms (Commentary), CategoryDocumentaries (Commentary), CategoryItaly (Commentary), CategoryUK (Commentary), CategoryUSA (Commentary), Festival Emmy Awards (Commentary), film movie Documentary Documentaries (Commentary), film movie Foreign (Commentary)
Great Britain released, PAL/Region 2&4 DVD:it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player. You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada: LANGUAGES: English ( Dolby Digital 5.1 ),English ( Subtitles ),WIDESCREEN (1.85:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Featurette, Interactive Menu,SYNOPSIS: Yellowstone is a park, but it's also the deadliest volcano on Earth. Beneath it, a sleeping 'dragon' is stirring. When an earthquake opens a crack for magma to seep through, other warning signs of an eruption start popping up, but they are ignored or dismissed as 'minor'. But when they learn an eruption will happen, panic breaks out through people of the USA and the world. This is a tale told from former Yellowstone scientists, who recall the final days before Yellowstone erupted, and everything...
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National Geographic August 2009 Yellowstone Supervolcano
by National Geographic
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Supervolcano
Supervolcano (Primary Contributor)
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Yellowstone Supervolcano
by Dead Unicorn
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Roots of Cataclysm: Geopulsation and the Atlantis Supervolcano
by Richard W. Welch (Author)
In Roots of Cataclysm, a journalist investigating the mysteries of the Ice Ages and the first human settlements of the New World finds that conventional doctrine is in conflict with the historical data. He presents a useful and easy-to-follow introduction to geology and what is known about pre-history in setting the context for his investigation.
The geology, geography and climatology of the last Ice Age offer evidence that could suggest Atlantis did exist. The author proposes that geopulsation of the earth together with tectonic shifts and catastrophic volcanoes could have created a land bridge or island chain connecting Europe to the mid-Atlantic; and he explores what that could mean for the origins of pre-Columbian American civilizations. Specifically, he traces the Atlantis...
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