Supervolcanoes
Supervolcano discovery
In 1971 heavy rain fell across most of Eastern Nebraska,
in the summer Palaeontologist Mike Voorhies travelled to Orchard and made a
startling discovery.
He was out in a gulley looking for fossils and he
found evidence of a prehistoric disaster with 200 rhinos, camels, horses,
lizards and turtles.
Dating showed they had all died abruptly 10million
years ago. The cause of death was a mystery; the teeth showed the animals had
died in their prime.
The skeletons also had a covering of a growth and soft
material that was biological.
Voorhies sent it away to Karl Reinhard, who decided
it was a symptom of lung disease.
Every animal seemed to be infected.
This meant that there had to be a universal problem
– it was ash that had choked these animals to death.
Only a volcano could have produced so much ash, but
there are NO volcanoes in Nebraska, where the animals were found. One Geologist
in Idaho knew of a volcanic eruption dating from the same time.
Bill Bonnichsen tied the 2 events together using
dating techniques and comparing the ash composition from a supervolcano called Bruneau Jarbridge, 1600km away from the Nebraska
fossils!
This was an amazing distance and to link the 2 together
led to the belief that
supervolcanoes exist. This meant that one eruption
covered half of America with 2m of ash. These 3 men had made a fantastic
volcanic discovery – they had proved that SUPERVOLCANOES exist!
The last supervolcano to erupt was 74000 years ago in
Indonesia a gigantic volcanic eruption shook the earth.
The ash was thrown out 3000km, created global
cooling and created a crater larger than the city of London.
This super eruption created Lake Toba, 100km long
and 50km wide.
A global record of sea bed and lake sediment
have allowed us to see that the
Toba
eruption erupted 3000km3 of
material from the volcano, 10,000 times the size of Mount St Helens
(see the image above).
Toba ash reached over 2000km away at depths of
35cm.
The sulphur erupted would have converted to sulphuric acid
aerosols and cooled the Earth by reflecting the suns energy back to space. A
supervolcano such as Toba could reduce temperatures globally by 5 degrees
Celsius – enough to spark an ice age and ruin agriculture globally!
Just a few thousand people lived on earth at the time –
but what would happen if this struck the USA?
A super eruption could affect whole world and badly
affect the USA.
The USA has a supervolcano in the shape of
Yellowstone National Park – but how likely is it that Yellowstone will erupt in
our lifetime?
A supervolcano is a big bang eruption with the reach to affect everyone living on the planet. Supervolcanoes are hard to spot. Whereas, regular composite volcanoes (such as Mount Pinatubo) have a cone shape, supervolcanoes are depressions in the ground and very hard to spot. The Calderas are so large they can sometimes only be spotted from space and have been identified in Indonesia, in New Zealand, in South America and an extinct one in Glen Coe in England. Yellowstone is still active, and is America’s most famous and popular National Parks. Over 3 million people visit the park every year, but do they know they are visiting a time bomb?
Supervolcanoes
are not mountains – they form DEPRESSIONS within the Earth’s crust.
They begin with a column of magma rising through a
vent into the Earth’s crust.
The magma gets stuck and pools, melting the rock
around for thousands of years.
Over thousands of years the pressure builds up and
when the eruption eventually happens it drains the magma lake and the land above
collapse down over, creating a caldera.
Supervolcanoes are eruptions and explosions of
catastrophic proportions, on the Volcano Explosivity Index (VEI) supervolcanoes
are an 8 on a scale that runs from 1 to 8.
Each leap up the scale represents an increase of
explosive scale of 10 times the power.
Mount St Helens was VEI 5!
The volcano at Yellowstone is close to 100km across, and
Yellowstone National park has hot springs and geysers and is known to be
geothermal.
Small eruptions have occurred every 20 to 30000 years at
Yellowstone, and it is also certain that there will be another super eruption
somewhere on the planet. However, it is difficult to know what to expect from a
supervolcano because we have never seen one.
What exists beneath Yellowstone is a hot spot, where magma
moves upwards in the Mantle, hits the base of the earth’s crust and melts it
creating a huge chamber of magma.
The hot spot is static but the Earth’s crust moves
over it.
There fore there have been many craters across the US
caused by this hot spot.
2 million years ago this hotspot settled under
Yellowstone.
The mountain range around Yellowstone is interrupted by
the 2.1million year’s caldera explosion – this swallowed 80 km worth of
mountains.
Since then, there have been 2 more explosions, 1.3million
years ago and 640000 years ago – a cycle of 600,000 to 700,000 years.
Are we due another? Scientists don’t know.
What warning signs are there of a Yellowstone eruption? Norris Geyser basin is one of Yellowstone’s biggest attractions. In 2003 ground temperatures soared to boiling point, geysers erupted more frequently, new vents opened putting out scorching volcanic gasses and mud which killed trees. The Local wildlife suffered, 5 Bison died where they stood. High levels of carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulphide suggested the Bison had died from gas poisoning, both gases come from Magma. There is another sign that magma is rising – ground deformation and land movement. To keep track of the ground movement scientists use GPS and INSAR – which measures the distance between the satellite in space and the ground. This means that they can compare images over time. Since 1996 there has been uplift near the Norris Geyser Basin, and that the land has uplifting over the past 7 years. 2 possibilities - 1.) small injections of magma push up the land or 2.) gas build up from the hydrothermal system push up the land. If it is magma this could lead to a small or huge eruption.
In 1999 a team of USGS scientists mapped the Yellowstone
Lake.
They found a bulge in the lake floor and explored it with
a remote camera and found that the sediments arte lifting up.
This could yield a hydrothermal explosion – an
eruption under water.
Yellowstone is constantly changing so the signs
that scientists usually use to predict eruptions are constantly happening so it
is difficult for scientists to predict what is happening in Yellowstone.
However, the Scientists can use the magma moving to
the surface causing earthquakes – 1000 to 3000 small earthquakes happen in the
area every year.
Seismometers measure these earthquakes. Large
earthquakes can trigger eruptions, and could happen in the future, as they allow
magma to escape the magma chamber. To understand the magma chamber the scientists (it was 8km below the ground) used seismometers placed right round the Park (22 in total). These seismometers measured earth tremors, created as the earth responds to movements of magma in the magma chamber. They detect the seismic waves passing through rocks. The waves pass through rock and magma at different speeds, so scientists can check what they pass through based upon the times it takes for the waves to reach the seismographs. They discovered that the magma chamber is 80km long, 40km wide and 8km deep. This huge mass of magma poses a massive threat. This chamber is not necessarily all liquid, but if this does form one single layer of 1000 km3 of eruptible material it could qualify as a supervolcano, Yellowstone has 5 times that. The scientists as yet are unclear as to if these conditions exist. If Yellowstone erupts it will be disastrous for the whole world. The magma will push the dome up, earthquakes will occur, allowing fissures to crack the surface allowing pressure release, lava to escape and columns of ash to be ejected 10s of kilometres into the air, pyroclastic flows would kill thousands of people. The ash would cover the Great Plains stopping grain production, economic activity in the US would be affected, and global climate would be changed, stopping the growing season. The consequences would be catastrophic. |
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Think about it! Watch the 2 videos on this page - how realistic are these 2 videos? Find out more about Yellowstone at this website Try the annotation exercise at the base of this page |
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