Fire Earth

Mass die-offs from human impact and planetary response could occur by early 2016

Archive for December, 2009

Reclaim Power: Block the System

Posted by feww on December 16, 2009

‘Black Shirt’ Nazis Beat Protesters

Unprecedented Police Brutality at Copenhagen Climate Conference

Most nations no longer beat even their animals like the bacon-head is hitting the demonstrator!


Protesters march towards the Bella Center, where the UN Climate Change 2009 Conference is taking place, during a demonstration in Copenhagen December 16, 2009. Credit: REUTERS/Pawel Kopczynski. Image may be subject to copyright.

Perhaps you ought to block the system instead, and remove its ignorant politicians and their brutal police forces


Protesters march towards the Bella Center, where the UN Climate Change 2009 Conference is taking place, during a demonstration in Copenhagen December 16, 2009.  Credit: REUTERS/Pawel Kopczynski. Image may be subject to copyright.

Related Links:


Posted in Copenhagen climate, police brutality, Protest in Europe, Reclaim Power, UN Climate Change 2009 | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

UPDATE 2: Tropical Cyclone Laurence (06S)

Posted by feww on December 16, 2009

TC Laurence Intensifies to 167 km Sustained Winds

Active Tropical Cyclone in Southern Hemisphere

  • Date Time: December 16 09:00 UTC
  • Approximate Position: 16.3ºS, 124.2ºE
  • Location:  Located approximately 440 nmi northeast of Port Hedland, Australia
  • Movement: Has been tracking 185 degrees  at 08  knots during  the past six hours.
  • Max Sustained Winds:  075 knots, Gusts 090 knots [compared with winds of 35 kt and gusts of 45 kt 48 hrs ago; and 075 kt,   24 hors ago]
  • Max Significant Wave Heights:  Laurence is now located over land.

Based on the current forecast track, the system is now expected to move further inland and dissipate within the next 60- 72 hours. ALL but two models agree.

Top Left: NASA’s Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite captured this image of Laurence’s rainfall on Dec. 14 at 5:29 p.m. ET (2329 UTC). TRMM revealed a well defined center of circulation in Laurence with areas of heavy rain (red) up to 2 inches per hour. Credit: NASA/SSAI, Hal Pierce

Top Right: NASA Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite 3-D image shows thunderstorm tops reaching about 9.3 miles high in various sides of Cyclone Laurence (red). The red areas also indicate rainfall at about 2 inches per hour. Credit: Hal Pierce.


Severe Tropical Cyclone Laurence. AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT BUREAU OF METEOROLOGY/ TROPICAL CYCLONE WARNING CENTRE PERTH/ TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TRACK MAP/  Issued at 2:41 pm WST Wednesday 16 December 2009. Image may be subject to copyright. Click on images to enlarge.

Remarks by BOM:

  • Severe Tropical Cyclone Laurence is a small but very intense tropical cyclone having VERY DESTRUCTIVE WINDS with gusts to 260 km/h .
  • Laurence is expected to weaken overnight IF it  moves  in a generally southerly direction towards Derby.
  • HEAVY RAIN is expected to continue over the north and west Kimberley. Daily rainfall totals in excess of 100mm are possible near the coast with totals decreasing further inland.

Related Links:

Posted in Derby, Laurence forecast track, Laurence projected path, Tropical Cyclone Laurence (06S) | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

Mayon Lava in Interesting Times!

Posted by feww on December 16, 2009

Mayon Lava Flow Grows

Mayon at a ‘high level of unrest’ may experience  more dangerous explosions


Mt Mayon Spews Lava.
Photo: Reuters. Image may be subject to copyright.

Mayon 5-level hazard alert raised to level 3 Tuesday after Mayon ejected ash and spewed lava.

According to Phivolcs, “Alert level 3 condition signifies magma is near the top of the crater and incandescent materials are now detaching. Mayon volcano is now at a ‘high level of unrest’ and may have more dangerous explosions.”

Quick fact about the latest episode of activity at Mt Mayon:

  • Phivolcs Level 3 alert means an eruption is expected within days to weeks [Level 4 means an eruption is imminent, while level 5 means eruption is in progress.]
  • Albay Governor Jose Salceda has declared “a state of imminent disaster” throughout the province, to allow the provincial government to access disaster funds needed to evacuate residents in Mayon’s danger zones.
  • Phivolcs scientist, Alex Baloloy,  said, “a full blown eruption is expected to take place within weeks to days.”
  • Baloloy said lava had cascaded down about 3 km from the crater summit of the volcano.
  • By Monday Mayon had emitted about 800 tons of Sulfur dioxide (SO2) gas.
  • The air in the region has been described as “hot and irritable” and “smelly.”
  • After 23 volcanic quakes on Monday, 5 ash explosions occurred at the volcano generating a mix of brownish and grayish ash cloud.
  • Phivolcs said it had recorded 78 volcanic earthquakes in the last 24 hours
  • Philippines disaster management officials have now evacuated about 50,000 people from Tabaco City and the towns of Malipot, Daraga, Camalig, Guinobatan and Ligao near Mt Mayon, aiming for a “zero-casualty situation.”
  • Schoolrooms within an 8-km radius of Mt Mayon have been suspended and used as evacuation shelters. [Let's hope the schools are better built in the Philippines than they are in China.]
  • Mayon has experienced more than 50 eruption in 400 years.
  • The first recorded major eruption occurred in 1616.
  • The most voluminous lava flow occurred in the 1766 eruption.
  • Mayon’s most destructive eruption occurred on February 1, 1814. The volcano bombarded the town of Cagsa with tephra, burying all but the bell tower of the town’s church in about 9 m of ash. As many as 2,300 of Albay residents may have perished in the volcano’s deadliest eruption to date.
  • Mayon erupted continuously for 7 days starting June 23, 1897. The village of Bacacay was buried in 15 m of lava. About 500 villagers were killed in the aftermath.

    Fire Earth Moderators believe more volcanic activities at other Philippines volcanoes are highly probable in the near future. The volcanoes located on the island on Mindanao are particularly liable to erupt in the next 12 to 36 months.

    The moderators also believe a large eruption may occur at Taal volcano. For other related forecast, see links below and search blog contents.

    Related Links:

    Posted in lava flow, Mayon, Seismology, volcano, Volcanology | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments »

    California Dry

    Posted by feww on December 15, 2009

    GRACE Reveals Major Groundwater Loss in California’s Heartland

    New space observations reveal that since October 2003, the aquifers for California’s primary agricultural region — the Central Valley — and its major mountain water source — the Sierra Nevadas — have lost nearly enough water combined to fill Lake Mead, America’s largest reservoir. The findings, based on data from the NASA/German Aerospace Center Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (Grace), reflect California’s extended drought and increased rates of groundwater being pumped for human uses, such as irrigation.

    The combined Sacramento and San Joaquin River Basins cover an area of approximately 154,000 square kilometers. They include California’s major mountain water source, the snowpack in the Sierra Nevada mountain range; and the Central Valley, the state’s primary agricultural region. Credit: UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA CENTER for HYDROLOGIC MODELING. Click image to enlarge.


    In research being presented this week at the American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco, scientists from NASA and the University of California, Irvine, detailed California’s groundwater changes and outlined Grace-based research on other global aquifers. The twin Grace satellites monitor tiny month-to-month changes in Earth’s gravity field primarily caused by the movement of water in Earth’s land, ocean, ice and atmosphere reservoirs. Grace’s ability to directly ‘weigh’ changes in water content provides new insights into how Earth’s water cycle may be changing.

    Combined, California’s Sacramento and San Joaquin drainage basins have shed more than 30 cubic kilometers of water since late 2003, said professor Jay Famiglietti of the University of California, Irvine. A cubic kilometer is about 264.2 billion gallons, enough to fill 400,000 Olympic-size pools. The bulk of the loss occurred in California’s agricultural Central Valley. The Central Valley receives its irrigation from a combination of groundwater pumped from wells and surface water diverted from elsewhere.

    “Grace data reveal groundwater in these basins is being pumped for irrigation at rates that are not sustainable if current trends continue,” Famiglietti said. “This is leading to declining water tables, water shortages, decreasing crop sizes and continued land subsidence. The findings have major implications for the U.S. economy, as California’s Central Valley is home to one sixth of all U.S. irrigated land, and the state leads the nation in agricultural production and exports.”

    “By providing data on large-scale groundwater depletion rates, Grace can help California water managers make informed decisions about allocating water resources,” said Grace Project Scientist Michael Watkins of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., which manages the mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, Washington.

    Trends in surface mass variations as observed by the GRACE mission over the period 2003 to 2009. The bluer tones indicate areas of mass loss, while warmer red tones indicate mass gains. Units are centimeters of equivalent surface water.


    Preliminary studies show most of the water loss is coming from the more southerly located San Joaquin basin, which gets less precipitation than the Sacramento River basin farther north. Initial results suggest the Sacramento River basin is losing about 2 cubic kilometers of water a year. Surface water losses account for half of this, while groundwater losses in the northern Central Valley add another 0.6 cubic kilometers annually. The San Joaquin Basin is losing 3.5 cubic kilometers a year. Of this, more than 75 percent is the result of groundwater pumping in the southern Central Valley, primarily to irrigate crops.

    Famiglietti said recent California legislation decreasing the allocation of surface waters to the San Joaquin Basin is likely to further increase the region’s reliance on groundwater for irrigation. “This suggests the decreasing groundwater storage trends seen by Grace will continue for the foreseeable future,” he said.


    Observed ground water trends in the Sacramento and San Joaquin River basins, Oct. 2003 to March 2009.

    The California results come just months after a team of hydrologists led by Matt Rodell of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., found groundwater levels in northwest India have declined by 17.7 cubic kilometers per year over the past decade, a loss due almost entirely to pumping and consumption of groundwater by humans.

    “California and India are just two of many regions around the world where Grace data are being used to study droughts, which can have devastating impacts on societies and cost the U.S. economy $6 to $8 billion annually,” said Rodell. Other regions under study include Australia, the Middle East – North Africa region and the southeastern United States, where Grace clearly captured the evolution of an extended drought that ended this spring. In the Middle East – North Africa region, Rodell is leading an effort to use Grace and other data to systematically map water- and weather-related variables to help assess regional water resources. Rodell added Grace may also help predict droughts, since it can identify pre-existing conditions favorable to the start of a drought, such as a deficit of water deep below the ground.


    In the 66-month period analyzed, the water stored in the combined Sacramento and San Joaquin Basin decreased by more than 31 cubic kilometers, or nearly the volumne of Lake Mead. Nearly two-thirds of this came from changes in groundwater storage, primarily from the Central Valley.


    NASA is working with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln to incorporate Grace data into NOAA’s U.S. and North American Drought Monitors, premier tools used to minimize drought impacts. The tools rely heavily on precipitation observations, but are limited by inadequate large-scale observations of soil moisture and groundwater levels. “Grace is the only satellite system that provides information on these deeper stores of water that are key indicators of long-term drought,” Rodell said.

    For more on Grace, see http://www.csr.utexas.edu/grace/ and http://grace.jpl.nasa.gov/ . Other media contacts: Margaret Baguio, University of Texas Center for Space Research, 512-471-6922; Jennifer Fitzenberger, University of California, Irvine, 949-824-3969.

    Summary:

    The combined Sacramento and San Joaquin River Basins

    • Cover an area of approximately 154,000km²
    • Includes California’s major mountain water source, the snowpack in the Sierra Nevada mountain range
    • Includes its primary agricultural region, the Central Valley (~52,000 km²)

    California’s Central Valley

    • Is one of the most productive agricultural regions in the world
    • Produces more than 250 different crops worth $17 billion per year (2002), or 8% of the food produced in the U. S. by value
    • Accounts for 1/6 of irrigated land in the U.S.
    • Supplies 1/5 of the demand for groundwater in the U.S.
    • Is the second most pumped aquifer in the U. S.

    Groundwater storage changes in the Sacramento‐San Joaquin River Basins from GRACE and supplementary data, October, 2003 – March, 2009

    • In the 66 month period analyzed, the water stored in the combined Sacramento‐San Joaquin River Basin decreased by over 31 km3, or nearly the volume of Lake Mead
    • Nearly two‐thirds of this, or roughly 20 km3, came from changes in groundwater storage, primarily from the Central Valley.
    • Preliminary analyses suggest that as much as 75% of the groundwater loss is occurring in the San Joaquin River Basin, including the Tulare Lake basin, which is consistent with ground‐based observaAons and other studies.
    • Drought condiAons since 2006 have minimized groundwater recharge and have resulted in constraints on surface water allocaAons to the Central Valley, triggering a reliance on groundwater resources, parAcularly in the San Joaquin Valley
    • Groundwater is being used for irrigaAon at unsustainable rates, leading to declining water tables, decreasing crop sizes and conAnued land subsidence.
    • In the long term, conAnued reliance on groundwater will deplete criAcal reserves that buffer cuts to surface water allocaAons. ConAnued depleAons pose significant threats to food producAon in the U. S. and the state’s economy
    • Note that the trends are for the specified Ame period (October, 2003‐March, 2009). This Ame period was selected because it maximized the overlap with the other datasets used in the study.

    Related Links:

    Posted in California drought, california water, Central Valley irrigation, Sierra Nevada, water loss | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

    TC Laurence Intensifies to 140 km Winds

    Posted by feww on December 15, 2009

    Cyclone Update: TC Laurence Intensifies to 140 km/h Winds [Gusts of ] Despite Moving Close to Shore

    TROPICAL CYCLONE 06S (Laurence)

    Active Tropical Cyclone in Southern Hemisphere

    • Date Time: December 15 09:00 UTC
    • Approximate Position: 14.6ºS, 125.4ºE
    • Location:  Located approximately 530 nmi northeast of Port Hedland, Australia
    • Movement: Has been tracking southwestward at 06  knots during  the past six hours.
    • Max Sustained Winds:  075 knots, Gusts 090 knots [compared to winds of 35 kt and gusts of 45 kt 24 hrs ago]
    • Max Significant Wave Heights: 5.3 m (16 feet)

    The system is now expected to move further inland and dissipate within the next 72 hours.


    TC Laurence Revised Projected Path. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC


    Infrared Mosaic Color Background  – Meteosat-7/MTSAT/GOES-West – South Pacific Region – CIMSS/SSEC/Wisc. Click image to update and enlarge.

    Related Links:

    Posted in Australia cyclone, cyclone, TC 06S, TC Laurence, tropical cyclone | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

    Mayon Volcano Oozes Lava

    Posted by feww on December 15, 2009

    Mayon, Philippines most active volcano, oozes lava and ejects plumes of ash into the air

    The Philippines Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, PHIVOLCS, raised the five-step alert to 3 after increased activity at Mayon volcano.

    The authorities have evacuated thousands of residents from the 6-km (4 miles) permanent danger zone, which is now declared a prohibited area.

    About 50,000 people live in an 8km (5 mile) radius of the mountain.


    Lava cascades down the slopes of Mayon volcano in Legazpi city, Albay province, Monday Dec. 14, 2009.  (AP Photo/Nelson Salting). Image may be subject to copyright.


    About 30,000 people were evacuated from the foot of Mt Mayon after the volcano spewed ash and lava in Albay province, the Philippines.  Photo:AFP. Image may be subject to copyright. Click image to enlarge.

    Magma had been steadily rising at Mayon since late November and finally oozed out of the crater late Monday, and the activity at the volcano is expected to intensify, said PHILVOC.

    If magma continues to push up the crater at a steady rate there would be lava flows, and “the possibility of an explosion.” PHILVOC reported.


    Major Volcanoes of the Philippines Location Map. Click image to enlarge.

    The 2467-meter Mayon Volcano is a stratovolcano [it is renowned for its almost perfectly conical shape] islocated about 15 kilometres northwest of Legazpi City [about 500 kilometers south of the capital, Manila,] in the province of Albay, Bicol Region, on the island of Luzon, in the Philippines.

    Mayon is one of the 22 or so active volcanoes in the Philippines, and has caused the deaths of thousands of people and devastated several towns and villages in three major eruptions since its 1814. In 2006, after several eruptions, typhoon Durian triggered mudslides of volcanic ash on November 30, which buried  several villages near the foot of the mountain, killing about 1,000 people.

    Fire Earth Moderators believe more volcanic activities at other Philippines volcanoes are highly probable in the near future. The volcanoes located on the island on Mindanao are particularly liable to erupt in the next 12 to 36 months.

    The moderators also believe a large eruption may occur at Taal volcano. For other related forecast, see links below and search blog contents.

    Related Links:

    Posted in Taal Volcano, volcanism, volcano, Volcano Hazard | Tagged: , , | 10 Comments »

    Climate Locked into ‘Unending’ El Niño?

    Posted by feww on December 15, 2009

    El Niño May Continue into Summer 2010 [and Beyond]

    El Niño Weekly Update [14 Dec 2009]

    ENSO Cycle: Recent Evolution, Current Status and Predictions

    UPDATE prepared by Climate Prediction Center / NCEP –  14 December 2009

    The latest weekly SST departures are:

    • Niño 4   ~ 1.3ºC
    • Niño 3.4  ~ 1.8ºC
    • Niño 3  ~ 1.6ºC
    • Niño 1+2 ~ 0.2ºC


    El Niño Map. [SOURCE: NOAA/ Climate Prediction Center / NCEP]

    Recent Evolution of Equatorial Pacific SST Departures (ºC)

    • LongitudeTimeDuring November 2008-February 2009, negative sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies covered the central and east-central equatorial Pacific Ocean.
    • Since the beginning of June 2009, SST anomalies have been at least +0.5°C across most of the equatorial Pacific.
    • During October 2009, positive SST anomalies increased across much of the equatorial Pacific.
    • During November 2009, positive SST anomalies remained nearly unchanged.
    • Recently, positive SST anomalies increased across the east-central Pacific.

    SST Departures (ºC) in the Tropical Pacific During the Last 4 Weeks

    During the last 4-weeks, SSTs were at least 1.0°C above average across much of the equatorial Pacific east of 170ºE, and more than 2.0°C above average across portions of the eastern half of the Pacific. Click image to enlarge.

    Global SST Departures (°C)


    During the last four weeks, equatorial SSTs were above-average across the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Also, above-average SSTs covered large areas of the Northern Hemisphere subtropics
    . Click image to enlarge.


    Click image to enlarge.

    Central & Eastern Pacific Upper-Ocean (0-300 m) Weekly Heat Content AnomaliesSince


    Since April 2009, the upper-ocean heat content has been above average across the eastern half of the equatorial Pacific Ocean. The heat content was previously below-average from mid-August 2008 through March 2009, with a minimum reached in late December 2008.
    Click image to enlarge.

    Sub-Surface Temperature Departures (°C) in the Equatorial Pacific


    Click image to enlarge.

    Atmospheric Circulation over the North Pacific & North America During the Last 60 Days
    During the last half of October, a nearly zonal pattern of below-average heights over the mid-latitudes was observed with an anomalous ridging over the higher latitudes. By early November, the anomalous zonal pattern of below-average heights at mid-latitudes had been replaced by strong anomalous ridges across the N. Pacific and much of N. America with below-average heights near Alaska. This pattern led to above-average temperatures across much of Canada and the United States and below-average temperatures in Alaska. Since late November, the pattern has reversed again with below-average heights in the mid-latitudes and above-average heights over Alaska.

    SST Outlook: NCEP CFS Forecast Issued 13 December 2009
    The CFS ensemble mean predicts El Niño will last at least into the Northern Hemisphere summer 2010.

    Summary

    • El Niño is present across the equatorial Pacific Ocean.
    • Sea surface temperatures (SST) are at least 1.0ºC-2.0ºC above-average across much of the central and east-central equatorial Pacific.
    • Based on current observations and dynamical model forecasts, El Niño is expected to continue and last at least into the Northern Hemisphere spring 2010 [and beyond.]

    Information and images on this page are sourced from Climate Prediction Center/NCEP/NOAA. Edited by FEWW

    Related Links:

    El Niño Updates:


    Posted in Climate Prediction, ENSO, Oceanic Niño Index, Pacific SST Outlook, SST anomalies | Tagged: , , , , , , | 14 Comments »

    What Mick Looked Like

    Posted by feww on December 15, 2009

    Image of the Day:

    Tropical Cyclone Mick


    Click image to enlarge.

    Tropical Cyclone Mick hovered over the Fiji Islands
    on December 13, 2009, and intensified the following day, pounding the archipelago with strong winds and heavy rains.  The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this true-color image of Mick on December 13, 2009.  The storm had maximum sustained winds of 55 knots (100 kilometers per hour) with gusts of to 70 knots (130 kilometers per hour). Image and caption credit: NASA Earth Observatory. [edited by FEWW]

    Related Links:

    Posted in mick, MODIS, storm, tropical cyclone | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

    Yellowstone eruption may cover 60 pct of US: FEWW

    Posted by feww on December 14, 2009

    The next cataclysmic event at Yellowstone supervolcano could cover about  60 percent of the continental US in volcanic materials —Fire Earth

    .

    Yellowstone’s Plumbing Exposed

    Plume Slants NW; Magma Body Bigger than Thought

    Dec. 14, 2009 – The most detailed seismic images yet published of the plumbing that feeds the Yellowstone supervolcano shows a plume of hot and molten rock rising at an angle from the northwest at a depth of at least 410 miles, contradicting claims that there is no deep plume, only shallow hot rock moving like slowly boiling soup.

    A related University of Utah study used gravity measurements to indicate the banana-shaped magma chamber of hot and molten rock a few miles beneath Yellowstone is 20 percent larger than previously believed, so a future cataclysmic eruption could be even larger than thought.


    Seismic imaging was used by University of Utah scientists to construct this picture of the Yellowstone hotspot plume of hot and molten rock that feeds the shallower magma chamber (not shown) beneath Yellowstone National Park, outlined in green at the surface, or top of the illustration. The Yellowstone caldera, or giant volcanic crater, is outlined in red. State boundaries are shown in black. The park, caldera and state boundaries also are projected to the bottom of the picture to better illustrate the plume’s tilt. Researchers believe “blobs” of hot rock float off the top of the plume, then rise to recharge the magma chamber located 3.7 miles to 10 miles beneath the surface at Yellowstone. The illustration also shows a region of warm rock extending southwest from near the top of the plume. It represents the eastern Snake River Plain, where the Yellowstone hotspot triggered numerous cataclysmic caldera eruptions before the plume started feeding Yellowstone 2.05 million years ago. Photo Credit: University of Utah

    The study’s of Yellowstone’s plume also suggests the same “hotspot” that feeds Yellowstone volcanism also triggered the Columbia River “flood basalts” that buried parts of Oregon, Washington state and Idaho with lava starting 17 million years ago.

    Those are key findings in four National Science Foundation-funded studies in the latest issue of the Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. The studies were led by Robert B. Smith, research professor and professor emeritus of geophysics at the University of Utah and coordinating scientist for the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory.

    “We have a clear image, using seismic waves from earthquakes, showing a mantle plume that extends from beneath Yellowstone,” Smith says.

    The plume angles downward 150 miles to the west-northwest of Yellowstone and reaches a depth of at least 410 miles, Smith says. The study estimates the plume is mostly hot rock, with 1 percent to 2 percent molten rock in sponge-like voids within the hot rock.

    Some researchers have doubted the existence of a mantle plume feeding Yellowstone, arguing instead that the area’s volcanic and hydrothermal features are fed by convection – the boiling-like rising of hot rock and sinking of cooler rock – from relatively shallow depths of only 185 miles to 250 miles.


    A cross section of the plume of hot and molten rock that tops out about 50 miles beneath Yellowstone National Park and tilts downward to the northwest to a depth of at least 410 miles. The plume is mostly hot rock with about 1 to 2 percent molten rock. Researches believe “blobs” of hot rock slowly detach from the top of the plume and rise upward to recharge the magma chamber that lies from 3.7 to 10 miles beneath Yellowstone. The chamber is also mostly hot rock, but with a sponge-like structure containing about 8 to 15 percent molten rock. Photo Credit: University of Utah

    The Hotspot: A Deep Plume, Blobs and Shallow Magma

    Some 17 million years ago, the Yellowstone hotspot was located beneath the Oregon-Idaho-Nevada border region, feeding a plume of hot and molten rock that produced “caldera” eruptions – the biggest kind of volcanic eruption on Earth.

    As North America slid southwest over the hotspot, the plume generated more than 140 huge eruptions that produced a chain of giant craters – calderas – extending from the Oregon-Idaho-Nevada border northeast to the current site of Yellowstone National Park, where huge caldera eruptions happened 2.05 million, 1.3 million and 642,000 years ago.

    These eruptions were 2,500, 280 and 1,000 times bigger, respectively, than the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. The eruptions covered as much as half the continental United States with inches to feet of volcanic ash. The Yellowstone caldera, 40 miles by 25 miles, is the remnant of that last giant eruption.

    The new study reinforces the view that the hot and partly molten rock feeding volcanic and geothermal activity at Yellowstone isn’t vertical, but has three components:

    • The 45-mile-wide plume that rises through Earth’s upper mantle from at least 410 miles beneath the surface. The plume angles upward to the east-southeast until it reaches the colder rock of the North American crustal plate, and flattens out like a 300-mile-wide pancake about 50 miles beneath Yellowstone. The plume includes several wider “blobs” at depths of 355 miles, 310 miles and 265 miles.”This conduit is not one tube of constant thickness,” says Smith. “It varies in width at various depths, and we call those things blobs.”
    • A little-understood zone, between 50 miles and 10 miles deep, in which blobs of hot and partly molten rock break off of the flattened top of the plume and slowly rise to feed the magma reservoir directly beneath Yellowstone National Park.
    • A magma reservoir 3.7 miles to 10 miles beneath the Yellowstone caldera. The reservoir is mostly sponge-like hot rock with spaces filled with molten rock”It looks like it’s up to 8 percent or 15 percent melt,” says Smith. “That’s a lot.”

    Researchers previously believed the magma chamber measured roughly 6 to 15 miles from southeast to northwest, and 20 or 25 miles from southwest to northeast, but new measurements indicate the reservoir extends at least another 13 miles outside the caldera’s northeast boundary, Smith says.

    He says the gravity and other data show the magma body “is an elongated structure that looks like a banana with the ends up. It is a lot larger than we thought – I would say about 20 percent [by volume]. This would argue there might be a larger magma source available for a future eruption.”

    Images of the magma reservoir were made based on the strength of Earth’s gravity at various points in Yellowstone. Hot and molten rock is less dense than cold rock, so the tug of gravity is measurably lower above magma reservoirs.

    The Yellowstone caldera, like other calderas on Earth, huffs upward and puffs downward repeatedly over the ages, usually without erupting. Since 2004, the caldera floor has risen 3 inches per year, suggesting recharge of the magma body beneath it.

    How to View a Plume

    Seismic imaging uses earthquake waves that travel through the Earth and are recorded by seismometers. Waves travel more slowly through hotter rock and more quickly in cooler rock. Just as X-rays are combined to make CT-scan images of features in the human body, seismic wave data are melded to produce images of Earth’s interior.

    The study, the Yellowstone Geodynamics Project, was conducted during 1999-2005. It used an average of 160 temporary and permanent seismic stations – and as many as 200 – to detect waves from some 800 earthquakes, with the stations spaced 10 miles to 22 miles apart – closer than other networks and better able to “see” underground. Some 160 Global Positioning System stations measured crustal movements.

    By integrating seismic and GPS data, “it’s like a lens that made the upper 125 miles much clearer and allowed us to see deeper, down to 410 miles,” Smith says.

    The study also shows warm rock – not as hot as the plume – stretching from Yellowstone southwest under the Snake River Plain, at depths of 20 miles to 60 miles. The rock is still warm from eruptions before the hotspot reached Yellowstone.

    A Plume Blowing in the 2-inch-per-year Mantle Wind

    Seismic imaging shows a “slow” zone from the top of the plume, which is 50 miles deep, straight down to about 155 miles, but then as you travel down the plume, it tilts to the northwest as it dives to a depth of 410 miles, says Smith.

    That is the base of the global transition zone – from 250 miles to 410 miles deep – that is the boundary between the upper and lower mantle – the layers below Earth’s crust.

    At that depth, the plume is about 410 miles beneath the town of Wisdom, Mont., which is 150 miles west-northwest of Yellowstone, says Smith.

    He says “it wouldn’t surprise me” if the plume extends even deeper, perhaps originating from the core-mantle boundary some 1,800 miles deep.

    Why doesn’t the plume rise straight upward? “This plume material wants to come up vertically, it wants to buoyantly rise,” says Smith. “But it gets caught in the ‘wind’ of the upper mantle flow, like smoke rising in a breeze.” Except in this case, the “breeze” of slowly flowing upper mantle rock is moving horizontally 2 inches per year.

    While the crustal plate moves southwest, the warm, underlying mantle slowly boils due to convection, with warm areas moving upward and cooler areas downward. Northwest of Yellowstone, this convection is such that the plume is “blown” east-southeast by mantle convection, so it angles upward toward Yellowstone.

    Scientists have debated for years whether Yellowstone’s volcanism is fed by a plume rising from deep in the Earth or by shallow churning in the upper mantle caused by movements of the overlying crust. Smith says the new study has produced the most detailed image of the Yellowstone plume yet published.

    But a preliminary study by other researchers suggests Yellowstone’s plume goes deeper than 410 miles, ballooning below that depth into a wider zone of hot rock that extends at least 620 miles deep.

    The notion that a deep plume feeds Yellowstone got more support from a study published this month inicating that the Hawaiian hotspot – which created the Hawaiian Islands – is fed by a plume that extends downward at least 930 miles, tilting southeast.

    A Common Source for Yellowstone and the Columbia River Basalts?

    Based on how the Yellowstone plume slants now, Smith and colleagues projected on a map where the plume might have originated at depth when the hotspot was erupting at the Oregon-Idaho-Nevada border area from 17 million to almost 12 million years ago.

    They saw overlap, between the zones within the Earth where eruptions originated near the Oregon-Idaho-Nevada border and where the famed Columbia River Basalt eruptions originated when they were most vigorous 17 million to 14 million years ago.

    Their conclusion: the Yellowstone hotspot plume might have fed those gigantic lava eruptions, which covered much of eastern Oregon and eastern Washington state.

    “I argue it is the common source,” Smith says. “It’s neat stuff and it fits together.”

    Smith conducted the seismic study with six University of Utah present or former geophysicists – former postdoctoral researchers Michael Jordan, of SINTEF Petroleum Research in Norway, and Stephan Husen, of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology; postdoc Christine Puskas; Ph.D. student Jamie Farrell; and former Ph.D. students Gregory Waite, now at Michigan Technological University, and Wu-Lung Chang, of National Central University in Taiwan. Other co-authors were Bernhard Steinberger of the Geological Survey of Norway and Richard O’Connell of Harvard University.

    Smith conducted the gravity study with former University of Utah graduate student Katrina DeNosaquo and Tony Lowry of Utah State University in Logan.

    PDF files of the new studies may be downloaded from: http://www.uusatrg.utah.edu/

    Related FEWW Links:

    Posted in Columbia River, flood basalts, Geothermal Research, Snake River Plain, Yellowstone National Park | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

    The Attack of the Cyclones

    Posted by feww on December 14, 2009

    5 Tropical Cyclone Systems Active Globally, 4 in the Southern Hemisphere

    TROPICAL CYCLONE 05B (WARD) – Indian Ocean

    • Date Time: December 14 00:00 UTC
    • Approximate Position: 8.9N 81.4E
    • Location:  160 nmi northeast of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
    • Movement: Has been tracking west (270 degrees) at 04 knots during  the past six hours.
    • Max Sustained Winds:  30 knots; Gusts: 40 knots
    • Max Significant Wave Heights: 3.6 m (11 feet)


    TC Ward MTSAT 1R (IR4) + Blue Marble Satellite Image. Click image to enlarge. Source: Digital Typhoon


    TC Ward Projected Path. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC


    TC Ward Satellite Image. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC

    TROPICAL CYCLONE 04P (MICK)

    # 01 Active Tropical Cyclone in South Pacific

    • Date Time: December 14 00:00 UTC
    • Approximate Position: 15.6S 176.5E
    • Location:  Located approximately 145 nmi north-northwest of Nadi, Fiji.
    • Movement: Has been tracking 150 degrees at 09  knots during  the past six hours.
    • Max Sustained Winds:  055 knots, Gusts 070 knots
    • Max Significant Wave Heights: 6 m (18 feet)

    TC Mick is intensify buffeting the tourist area of the Yasawa Islands west of Fiji with strong winds and torrential rain.

    Mick may be heading towards Tonga.


    TC Mick Projected Path. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC


    TC Mick Satellite Image. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC

    TROPICAL CYCLONE 06S (Laurence)

    # 02 Active Tropical Cyclone in Southern Hemisphere

    • Date Time: December 14 00:00 UTC
    • Approximate Position: 12.0S 125.4E
    • Location:  Located approximately 235 nmi west of Darwin, Australia
    • Movement: Has been tracking 290 degrees at 06  knots during  the past six hours.
    • Max Sustained Winds:  035 knots, Gusts 045 knots
    • Max Significant Wave Heights: 3.6 m (11 feet)


    TC Laurence Projected Path. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC


    TC Laurence Satellite Image. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC

    TROPICAL CYCLONE 05S (Five)

    # 03 Active Tropical Cyclone in Southern Hemisphere

    • Date Time: December 14 00:00 UTC
    • Approximate Position: 11.7S 82.4E
    • Location:  Located approximately 650 nmi southeast of Diego Garcia Island.
    • Movement: Has been tracking 220 degrees at 06  knots during  the past six hours.
    • Max Sustained Winds:  035 knots, Gusts 045 knots
    • Max Significant Wave Heights: 3.3 m (10 feet)


    TC Five Projected Path. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC


    TC Five Satellite Image. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC

    TROPICAL CYCLONE 03S (Cleo)

    # 04 Active Tropical Cyclone in Southern Hemisphere

    • Date Time: December 14 00:00 UTC
    • Approximate Position: 17.7S 61.7E
    • Location:  Located approximately 400 nmi east-northeast Réunion Island, Indian Ocean
    • Movement: Has been tracking 190 degrees at 07  knots during  the past six hours.
    • Max Sustained Winds:  030 knots, Gusts 040 knots
    • Max Significant Wave Heights: 3.3 m (10 feet)


    TC Cleo Projected Path. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC


    TC Cleo Satellite Image. Click image to enlarge. Source: JTWC

    • Latest Full Disk Image Available Here

    [Conversion Note: 1 nautical mile (nmi) = 1.852 km; 1 knot = 1nmi per hour]

    Related links:

    Posted in Australia cyclone, Diego Garcia Cyclone, Fiji cyclone, Réunion Cyclone, Sri Lanka Cyclone | Tagged: , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

    Montserrat: What Next?

    Posted by feww on December 13, 2009

    Uncertain Future for Montserrat Island

    Montserrat island could become completely uninhabitable by 2013 or earlier

    Based on the pattern of volcanic activity at Soufriere Hills volcano since 1995, evidence of increased volcanism globally and a number of other  factors, the FEWW EarthModel forecasts the probability of Montserrat island becoming completely uninhabitable as follows:

    Probability of Montserrat Becoming Uninhabitable in the Near Future

    • 2009 ≥ 50%
    • 2010 ≥ 56%
    • 2011 ≥ 60%
    • 2012 ≥ 70%
    • 2013 ≥ 80%

    Montserrat Island Details:

    • Capital:
      • Plymouth (destroyed in 1997- see photo below)
      • Brades (de facto)
    • Location: Montserrat Island
    • Coordinates: (16.72 N, 62.18 W)
    • Height: 915 meters (3,010 feet)
    • Official languages:     English
    • Ethnic groups:     West African, Mulatto, British, Irish
    • Government:     British Overseas Territory
    • Area:   102 km²  (39 sq mi )


    View E across ash-covered Plymouth, the former capital city and major port of Montserrat, toward Soufriere Hills volcano.
    Before the volcano became active in July 1995, about 5,000 people lived in Plymouth, located 4 km west of English’s Crater. During the first two years of the eruption, ash and noxious gas from explosions and pyroclastic flows frequently settled on Plymouth. On August 3, about 3 weeks after this image was taken, the first significant pyroclastic flow swept through the evacuated town. The flow triggered many fires and caused extensive damage to buildings and community facilities by direct impact and burial.
    Date: 12 July 1997. Credit: R.P. Hoblitt/ USGS.


    Political map of Caribbean islands.

    Related Links:

    More Images:

    Posted in FEWW Volcanic Forecast, HUMAN EHANCED NATURAL DISASTERS, Pyroclastic flow, volcanic activity | Tagged: , , , | 5 Comments »

    Dynamic Duo Volcanoes Erupt

    Posted by feww on December 12, 2009

    Nicaragua’s Volcán Concepción spewed smoke and ash into the air

    Nicaragua’s Concepcion volcano erupted Saturday spewing smoke into the air and showering ash on nearby villages. Nicaragua’s Ineter geophysics agency has alerted the authorities about the possibility of further eruptions.

    Dozens of mud structures in the area were damaged and a dozen people injured in 2005 episode of seismic activity at Volcán Concepción.


    Volcán Concepción is one of Nicaragua’s highest and most active volcanoes. The symmetrical basaltic-to-dacitic stratovolcano forms the NW half of the dumbbell-shaped island of Ometepe in Lake Nicaragua and is connected to neighboring Madera volcano by a narrow isthmus. A steep-walled summit crater is 250 m deep and has a higher western rim. N-S-trending fractures on the flanks of the volcano have produced chains of spatter cones, cinder cones, lava domes, and maars located on the NW, NE, SE, and southern sides extending in some cases down to Lake Nicaragua. Concepción was constructed above a basement of lake sediments, and the modern cone grew above a largely buried caldera, a small remnant of which forms a break in slope about halfway up the north flank. Frequent explosive eruptions during the past half century have increased the height of the summit significantly above that shown on current topographic maps and have kept the upper part of the volcano unvegetated. Photo by Jaime Incer. Caption by GVP

    Volcán Concepción Details

    Last Known Eruption: 2007
    Summit Elevation: 1,700? m  (5,577 feet)
    Latitude: 11.538°N  (11°32’16″N)
    Longitude: 85.622°W (85°37’21″W)
    Source: GVP

    Meanwhile

    Soufrière Hills Volcano spewed pyroclastic debris, forcing evacuations of Zone C

    MVO raised the Hazard Level to 4 on 10 December, making  Zone C off limit, and allowing only daytime access  to Zone B.


    Soufrière Hills Volcano in Montserrat spews ash into the air.

    MVO had previously reported high level of activity at the Soufrière Hills Volcano citing ” nine hundred and fifty seven rockfall signals, two hundred and seven long period events, three volcano tectonic and one hundred and six hybrid earthquakes recorded. Activity has continued in cycles although these cycles have become more irregular in time in the last few days.”

    “Pyroclastic flow and rockfall activity has been concentrated on the northern side of the volcano.” It also reported  large pyroclastic flows from Tuitt’s Ghaut, onto Farrell’s plain and into Tyers Ghaut, with many runout distances  reaching 2 km from the lava dome.

    “At around 6:40 am on 10 December there was a notably large seismic signal recorded associated with a relatively large pyroclastic flow down Tyers Ghaut. This flow had a runout distance of 3.5 km, stopping just beyond the west end of Lee’s village.” MVO said.


    Ash and Steam Plume, Soufriere Hills Volcano, Montserrat. Gray deposits including pyroclastic flows and lahars are visible extending from the volcano toward the coastline. Credit NASA. Astronaut photograph ISS021-E-5555 was acquired on October 11, 2009.

    Soufrière Hills became active in 1995  and has since continued to erupt rendering more than half of Montserrat island uninhabitable, burying the capital city, Plymouth, and prompting widespread evacuations.  On June 25, 1997 the volcano erupted, killing 19 people and prompting about 60 percent of the population (about 8,000 refugees) to leave the island.

    Related Links:

      Posted in Pyroclastic flow, seismic activity, volcanic activity, volcanism, volcano | Tagged: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

      SE Australia Toasted Brown

      Posted by feww on December 12, 2009

      3rd year of drought in Australia

      No Relief in Sight for Farmers in Victoria and New South Wales!

      Drought in SE Australia

      September 7-22, 2005

      September 7 – 22, 2009

      Centered on the agricultural areas near the Murray River, Australia’s largest river, between Hume Reservoir and Lake Tyrrell, the satellite images show vegetation conditions for a 16-day period in the middle of September in 2005 and 2009 compared to the average mid-September conditions over the decade. Places with vegetation above the decadal average are green, average areas are off-white, areas where vegetation growth was below average are brown.

      Here at the border between the state of Victoria (south of the Murray) and New South Wales (north of the river), mid-September is the height of the growing season for cereal grains, including wheat, barley, and oats.

      While the overall pattern in each year is unmistakable—2005 was the last year of good growing conditions—there are localized differences in how crops responded to the climate. These differences could have numerous causes, from localized rainfall to variability in the drought-tolerance of an area’s predominant crop type. At the individual field level, a brown or green patch in a single year could indicate a crop that was struggling or flourishing, but it could also reflect a management decision to plant or harvest at a different time or to leave a field fallow.

      The images collected by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite. NASA images by Robert Simmon. Caption by Rebecca Lindsey, with assistance from Dath Mita and Curt Reynolds, USDA Foreign Agricultural Service. [Edited by FEWW.]

      Related Links:

      Posted in australia grains, australia satellite images, australia vegetation, MODIS, poor crops | Tagged: , , , , | 12 Comments »

      Ten Climate Change Lies, Myths and Misconceptions (9)

      Posted by feww on December 11, 2009

      Climate Change Lie # 9

      Mobilizing Forces to Fight Climate Change

      Profile of the “Climate Change Knight,” the ones who buy this misconception:

      Sigmund Freud viewed nature as a malignant force to fight and overcome. “Humanoids fight nature trying their damnedest to prevent her from doing what she does best: Sustaining life!” MSRB said.

      In The Death of Homo Sapiens Sapiens a colleague wrote:  “Our lives are based on an abstraction [syn: misconception, lie] that forms the basis of the modern economic theory. Homo economicus model tells us that our total wants are insatiable, that we can make no value judgments and that whatever we desire must be normative. To ensure that the theory stands, however, we are bombarded with advertising.”

      Global Climate Change, is NOT of our own doing because “whatever we desire must be normative.” It’s all nature’s fault [sic.] It’s nature that has failed to provide us unlimited resources to satisfy our insatiable wants, and boundless supply of toilet paper to clean our mess.  Nature is denting our lifestyles. Nature is harming us. Nature is a terrorist.

      We need defending ourselves against Nature. We must fight her and win the war. We must use the full force of our technology to attack nature and subject the wild beast to our will (!)

      Freud said:

      “Against the dreaded external world one can only defend oneself by some kind of turning away from it, if one intends to solve the task by oneself. There is, indeed, another and a better path: that of becoming a member of human community, and, with the help of a technique guided by science, going over to attack against nature and subjecting her to human will.”

      Unsurprisingly, the Homo economicus misconception, in its fight to defend us,  has fatally wounded nature through its inordinate consumption of energy, particularly fossil fuels. The [misconception] has driven our ecosystems (life support systems) to the verge of imminent collapse.

      Take the Al Gore Campaign, For example:

      A colleague submitted: “Al Gore the environmental champion and proud winner of Nobel Peace Prize [It was an unfortunate Freudian slip that Henry A. Kissinger won it in 1973, and Barack "Just War" Obama in 2009] is urging young people to stop the construction of coal plants that lack carbon storage facility by engaging in civil disobedience.”

      What’s the problem with that?

      “The problem is being economical with the inconvenient truth: Failing to advise the same young people on the vital need for a ‘radical’ change in the system of economy.  If the young people are advised to engage in civil disobedience, they should do it for the fundamental reasons that go beyond just scratching the surface. You can’t cure a terminal case of cancer by treating the symptoms.”

      What are the causes of world’s cancer?

      The Exponential Growth Economy: We live on a finite planet. However the system of political economy that condemns our future, thrives on exponential growth, which means infinite growth. We have reached the collision point.

      Overconsumption: Humanoids are overusing earth’s ecosystems services, and depleting her finite natural capital, including the polluting fossil fuels, and eroding its capacity to renew its services by at least 177.43% [as of April 2008.] As a result the planet’s ecosystems face eminent collapse.

      Centralization: Centralization, a process fueled by globalization and fired by militarization, is resource-intensive, wasteful and destructive to the planet’s ecosystems. The United States and ROW must opt for decentralization to avoid collapse.

      So, there are the naked facts—”An Inconvenient Truth.

      Yes: To Al Gore’s call for civil disobedience to protect the planet.

      No: To superficial measures that barely scratch the surface of the terminal socioeconomic ills responsible for looming ecocide!

      Conclusion: Climate Change Misconception #9 is all about doing business as usual.

      As President “Just War” Obama said:  “We must fight Climate Change!” “If we fail we risk catastrophe”

      Related Links:

      Posted in 10 Climate Change Lies, Barack Obama, collapse, Homo economicus, modern economic theory | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

      Galeras Alert Level Raised to “Orange”

      Posted by feww on December 11, 2009

      Galeras Volcano Could Erupt Anytime!

      Colombia’s Galeras activity has intensified signifying an eruption may be imminent—INGEOMINAS


      Galeras seen in this aerial photo (Undated). Source: Alaska Earthquake Information center. Image may be subject to copyright.

      In June this year FEWW Forecast:

      Galeras could erupt continually throughout 2009  and most of 2010 AND it hasn’t disappointed yet!

      The Colombian Institute of Mining and Geology (INGEOMINAS), raised alert level Thursday to ‘Orange’ in the area near Galeras volcano, expecting it to erupt soon.

      INGEOMINAS said Galeras activity has intensified signifying an eruption may be imminent within days or weeks. Adding that the volcano was showing recurrent episodes of intense seismic activity.

      The authorities have evacuated about 8,000 residents from the hazard zones near the volcano.

      In June 2009 Galeras volcano erupted twice in 24 hours , covering nearby villages in a blanket of volcanic ash.

      Although the first eruption on Sunday June 7, 2009 caused no damage, the authorities ordered 8,000 residents to evacuate the surrounding villages.

      The second explosion on Monday was the 8th eruption this year to shake the volcano, which is located in the Colombian department of Nariño near the town of  Pasto, and close to the Ecuadorean border.

      Currently the most active volcano in Colombia, the 4,276-meter-high volcano’s first historical eruption occurred on December 7, 1580. The volcano resumed activity in 1988 after 10 years of dormancy. It erupted in 1993, killing nine people, three tourists and six scientists who had descended into the volcano’s crater to conduct tests.

      galeras from Pasto stan williams
      Galeras from Pasto (1993?). Photo by Stan Williams. Image may be subject to copyright.

      Eight of Colombia’s 15 volcanoes have erupted in the last 100 years, and three of them since 1990: Galeras, Nevado del Huila, and Nevado del Ruiz.

      An explosive eruption ruptured the summit of Nevado del Ruiz on November 13, 1985, spewing about 20 million cubic meters of volcanic ash and rocks into the air. Forty-meter thick lahars traveling at velocities of up to 50 kilometers per hour destroyed the town of Armero 74 km away from the explosion crater, killing more than 23,000 people. [Source: USGS]

      Galeras activity in 2009

      • 14 February 19:11 an eruption spewed ash SO2 and other and volcanic gases. (Red Alert, Level I). [Pasto was covered in ash, 8,000 people evacuated.]
      • 20 February 07:05 spewed ashes. (Red Alert,  Level I).
      • 12 March 19:30, and 13 March 15:55 explosions were recorded (Orange Alert, Level II ).
      • 13 March 15:55, eruption occurred spewing gas and hot ashes at 16:34 further emission was recorded. (Orange Alert, Level II).
      • 24 April 07:32, two explosions were recorded. (Orange Alert, Level II).
      • 29 April monitors recorded increase in seismic activity. (Orange Alert, Level II).
      • 11 May 11:58, tectonic venting. (Orange Alert, Level II).
      • 17 May 21:40, seismic activity recorded. (Orange Alert, Level II).

      For other episodes see:

      Related Links:

      Posted in Explosive Eruption, volcanism, volcano, volcano eruption, Volcano Hazard | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

       
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