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Beneath Yellowstone National Park lies a supervolcano, a behemoth far more powerful than your average volcano. It has the ability to expel more than 1,000 cubic kilometers of rock and ash at once — 2,500 times more material than erupted from Mount St. Helens in 1980, which killed 57 people. That could blanket most of the United States in a thick layer of ash and even plunge the Earth into a volcanic winter.

Yellowstone’s last supereruption occurred 631,000 years ago. And it’s not the planet’s only buried supervolcano. Scientists suspect that a supereruption scars the planet every 100,000 years, causing many to ask when we can next expect such an explosive planet-changing event.

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The early evidence, presented at a recent volcanology conference, shows that Yellowstone’s most recent supereruption was sparked when new magma moved into the system only decades before the eruption. Previous estimates assumed that the geological process that led to the event took millenniums to occur.

Continue reading:  A Surprise From the Supervolcano Under Yellowstone

Commentary by The Secular Jurist:  Good grief, like we didn’t have anything else to worry about these days!

13 thoughts on “A Surprise From the Supervolcano Under Yellowstone

  1. Like I mentioned in your post yesterday, we humans are specks of nothing and, at any moment, nature can turn us into a distant memory. Thing is, that volcano WILL erupt again at some point. It’s just a matter of when.

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