This outpouring of gas, smoke, ash, and debris changed the climate ... of the beast that lurks beneath the beauty of Yellowstone Park. A map of the magma reservoirs under Yellowstone.
That movement has now left one pool of molten material on the west of the caldera disconnected from any heat sources, which will likely allow it to cool. Meanwhile, the largest pool of near-surface ...
If the volcano exploded tomorrow, it would cover tens of thousands of square miles with hot gas, magma, and ash, disrupting ... retrieved allowed them to map Yellowstone's plumbing, which looks ...
Efforts have been made previously to map out the distribution of magma beneath the Yellowstone Caldera—but such have been limited by the approaches used. Past methods employed to probe the ...
Africa is broken. It is being dissected by the famous East African Rift which extends over a length of 5000 km along the eastern side of Africa and seems poised to destroy Africa as we know it.
Yellowstone National Park's oldest and hottest geothermal area, a favorite spot for park visitors, was shaken by a minor ...
Though the volcano’s magma chambers could hold enough material for a caldera-forming event, none of them are likely to erupt soon.
Yellowstone National Park, the oldest national park in the USA and home to some of the most unique geological features on ...
Unlike smaller volcanic eruptions that primarily produce lava flows, a Yellowstone eruption would eject most of its magma as ash, creating colossal plumes that would blanket much of North America ...