Is the Yellowstone caldera safe? You decide...

by Nathan Natas 43 Replies latest jw friends

  • daniel-p
    daniel-p

    Check this article out for Yellowstone fallout: http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/supervolcano/article.shtml

    Supervolcano The world's biggest bang

    A global disaster never witnessed by modern man may one day mushroom above the pine forests and hot springs of Yellowstone National Park in the United States.

    While ordinary volcanoes can kill thousands of people and destroy entire cities, it's thought a supervolcano could claim up to a billion lives and devastate continents.

    Ash tilts a jet photo: RL Rieger/USGS

    Heavy stuff: Ash from the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines settles on the tail section of a World Airways DC-10, causing it to tilt onto its rear wheels.

    It's very likely a super-eruption would shutdown airports worldwide.

    "A super-eruption is the world's biggest bang", says Prof. Bill McGuire of the Benfield Greig Hazard Research Centre at the University of London. "It's a volcanic explosion big enough to dwarf all others and with a reach great enough to affect everyone on the planet".

    Considering their destructive potential, it's a good thing super-eruptions are so rare – the last one happened in Toba, Indonesia, about 74,000 years ago. Geologists think these eruptions take place about every 50,000 years, which suggests one is overdue.

    About 40 supervolcanoes are dotted across the globe. There are two in Britain – one in Glencoe, Scotland, the other in Scafell in the Lake District. However, most supervolcanoes, including those in Britain, burned out long ago.

    Yellowstone, located in the western state, Wyoming, is a dormant supervolcano, which means a major eruption could happen in the future. But before you get worried, it's important to remember that most volcano experts say a Yellowstone super-eruption is probably a long way off, or it may never happen at all.

    Mt St Helens erupts photo: Austin Post/USGS

    Super size: About 2.1 m years ago the Yellowstone supervolcano erupted 2,500 times more ash than Mount St Helens (pictured).

    Read about the 1980 Mount St Helens eruption on BBC On This Day.

    "It's far more likely, if there is an eruption, it'll be on a small scale, perhaps comparable to Mt St Helens," says volcano expert Prof. Steve Sparks of the University of Bristol.

    Although they're called 'super', most people would have trouble spotting a supervolcano. Their main feature is a large magma chamber, which is an underground reservoir filled with flowing, hot rock under huge pressures.

    Some stats on the Yellowstone supervolcano:

    • A super-eruption would equal the force of 1,000 Hiroshima atomic bombs exploding every second.
    • You could fit Tokyo, the world's biggest city, in Yellowstone's super-volcanic crater.
    • Three super-eruptions at Yellowstone appear to have occurred on a 600,000-700,000 year cycle starting 2.1 million years ago. The most recent took place 640,000 years ago – suggesting Yellowstone is overdue for an eruption.
    • Ash
      US television networks would probably bring the first news of a Yellowstone super-eruption to the UK. It probably wouldn't take long for the first physical signs to appear.

      Kilauea erupts photo: USGS

      River of fire: Lava streams from the Hawaiian volcano Kilauea in 1959.

      Although it may look bad, geologists consider such eruptions to be 'quiet'. Explosive eruptions like supervolcanoes pose a much greater threat to humans.

      Within 3-4 days, a fine dusting of ash could fall across Europe, according to a UK Met Office computer forecast commissioned by the BBC. The computer model predicts how ash would spread following a nine-day June eruption of 1000 cubic km of ash and gas from Yellowstone.

      The model shows that the fallout from a Yellowstone super-eruption could affect three quarters of the US. The greatest danger would be within 1,000 km of the blast where 90 per cent of people could be killed. Large numbers of people would die across the country – inhaled ash forms a cement-like mixture in human lungs. Even the US East Coast could be paralysed by 1cm of ash.

      Many people think that lava flows are the most dangerous volcanic hazards, but ash is often the biggest killer. Because supervolcanoes are highly explosive, much of the magma doesn't get a chance to become lava. Instead it is blasted into countless airborne ash particles – tiny scorching particles of jagged rock.

      Ash can:

    • Kill and sicken humans and animals
    • Reduce sunlight
    • Trigger rainfall causing mudslides known as lahars
    • Severely disrupt air, road and rail transport
    • Crush buildings – 30 cm of dry ash is enough to collapse a roof
    • Contaminate water supplies
    • Kill crops and other vegetation
    • Clog machinery such as air filters.

    The worst of these effects would not be experienced in Europe where the ash covering would only amount to a dusting.

    A man sweeps ash from his roof photo: USGS

    Useful stuff: A Washington State resident sweeps ash from his roof after the eruption of Mount St Helens.

    Ash creates numerous hazards, but it also has positive uses. Fertilisers, soaps, household cleaners, metal polish and cement often contain volcanic ash.

    Climate change
    The most wide reaching effect of a Yellowstone eruption would be much colder weather.

    Volcanoes can inject sulphur gas into the upper atmosphere, forming sulphuric acid aerosols that rapidly spread around the globe. Scientists believe sulphuric aerosols are the main cause of climatic cooling after an eruption.

    Aerosols in the upper atmosphere would also scatter sunlight making the sky look like a cloudy winter morning all day long. The skies in Europe would appear red in the days after the eruption.

    To predict how the climate may be affected, the BBC relied on historic data from the Toba supervolcano in Indonesia about 74,000 years ago and computer model forecasts commissioned from the UK Met Office and the Max Planck Institute in Hamburg.

    Experts believe a Yellowstone eruption would inject 2,000 million tonnes of sulphur 40-50km above the Earth's surface. Once there it would take 2-3 weeks for the resulting sulphuric acid aerosols to cloak the globe – with devastating effects.

    Global annual average temperatures would drop by up to 10 degrees, according to computer predictions. And the Northern Hemisphere could cool by up to 12 degrees. Experts say colder temperatures could last 6-10 years, gradually returning to normal.

    Scientists predict that the Monsoon would fail as a result of even larger temperature changes in the Southern Hemisphere, causing mass starvation in the Asian countries that depend on these life-giving rains.

    Temperatures in Europe could be at least 5 degrees cooler the summer after the eruption.

    The actual effects of a Yellowstone super-eruption could be different depending on the size of eruption, the time of year and any number of other factors.

    How likely is all of this?
    An event as massive as a super-eruption would change the Earth and our society forever. It's difficult to predict the full devastation that would follow. We know there would be great loss of life and ill health, changes to our planet and major economic losses.

    Scientists believe another super-eruption will happen someday. They can't completely discount a Yellowstone eruption in the near future, but the chances of this happening are extremely remote.

  • ziddina
    ziddina

    OOOh, yeah, I'm right in the middle of that "1,000 km" kill zone...

  • daniel-p
    daniel-p

    zidd: You'd be one of the lucky ones. The rest of us will be stuck bartering Jack Daniels or sex for food.

  • dobbie
    dobbie

    Don't worry, the worlds going to end in 2012 anyway. Glad i live in Europe tho!

  • ziddina
    ziddina

    One thing about Yellowstone and rabid, extremist Muslims - relax, I'll connect the dots in a minute...

    If the Muslims' god were 'real', 'he' would have caused Yellowstone to erupt already, since that would destroy the "Great Satan", America. Seems Allah isn't serious about getting rid of America, at least not by natural disaster. Perhaps, like Jehovah/Yahweh, Allah doesn't understand how volcanoes really work...

    T'would be absolutely hilarious if the volcano remains quiet - simmering, but non-eruptive - for another 1,000 to 10,000 years... If that happens - so much for 'Allah'... 'Course, the Muslims, like the WTBTS, have that eternal 'out' for failed prophecy and divine apathy.... "If Allah wills it..." Meaning that, if nothing happens, it was really Allah's will [or Jehovah's will] to delay and/or do nothing.

    "If Allah wills it..." "Wait upon Jehovah...." Stalling tactics and excuses. Middle Eastern gods are all talk and bluster...

    Zid

    Daniel-P!!! I'm a-gonna RUN LIKE HELL if I think it's going to erupt!!! Within my lifetime, that is...

  • shamus100
    shamus100

    Dahmn.

    I just did some home reno's.

    Oh well - I'm quitting my job and getting wasted tonight. S'long everyone!

  • jdhf
    jdhf

    I have to say, after finishing my uni studies on earthquakes and volcanoes, the supervolcano in Yellowstone really worried me. Not really if but when it does blow, it will have devastating effects on the world, not just the USA.. As the largest volcano in the world, and although dormant, geologists are really worried about it. this was clear during my studies. The activity has not surprised me, and the data I have collated from the USGS shows huge changes. There is no point in panicking though as it probably will not blow in our lifetime, although who can be sure with a ticking time bomb.....sleep well!

  • ziddina
    ziddina

    jdhf, I haven't seen this option discussed much in recent programs/articles, but there have been other eruptions at Yellowstone besides the biggies... Here's a site that briefly touches on the 80 or so smaller eruptions that have occurred at Yellowstone since the last major caldera-style eruption... http://www.usnews.com/money/blogs/capital-commerce/2009/01/01/earthquakes-at-yellowstone-supervolcano-update-.html

    So, even tho we might be facing an eruption, it may not be a 'super'eruption - a caldera eruption. Having said that, though, even a smaller eruption could cause major problems for the U.S.A. - especially if it hits the central area of America - our 'breadbasket'... Illinois, Iowa, North and South Dakota, Colorado, Kansas - all those wheat-and-corn-producing states...

    We'll all just have to wait and see... And make plans to move south, maybe??? Zid

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    I've been to Craters of the Moon National Monument which is about 100 miles west-southwest of Yellowstone, and I drove along the huge expanses of "blue dragon" lava (now quite cool). An eruption like the ones that formed CoTMNM would be very impressive visually, to say the least.

    As I have said several times over the past many years, a caldera eruption would be at least a near-extinction-level event and would dramatically change the world.

    Personally, I'm doing everything I can to avert such a disaster.

  • ziddina
    ziddina

    Ah, okay, Nathan, I'll bite...

    HOW are you doing everything you can to avert a major caldera eruption??? Inquiring minds MUST know!!! (And the world's vulcanologists would be mighty interested, too.... )

    GASP!! Not - an ATOMIC BOMB????

    Zid

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