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Yellowstone Update: 22 more quakes in last 6 hours
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/recenteqsus/Maps/US2/43.45.-111.-109_eqs.php ^

Posted on 12/29/2008 6:16:57 PM PST by MittFan08

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To: dannyprimrose1; All

And no one thinkks anything of it.
****
Me thinkks something of it!! Keep the info coming!! I’m watching but some of it (graphs) I don’t understand.


21 posted on 12/29/2008 6:33:05 PM PST by briarbey b (There is nothing new under the sun.)
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To: HEY4QDEMS
Yeah, but will it stop the Global Warming Warriors?

Most likely it will stop them AND their opponents.

22 posted on 12/29/2008 6:33:32 PM PST by PistolPaknMama (Al-Queda can recruit on college campuses but the US military can't! --FReeper airborne)
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To: Momaw Nadon

“What does ‘locally’ mean?”

A hydrothermal explosion is only a danger within the particular area of the park where it occurs.


23 posted on 12/29/2008 6:33:39 PM PST by MittFan08
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To: briarbey b

bookmark


24 posted on 12/29/2008 6:33:59 PM PST by mplsconservative
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To: MittFan08

YELLOWSTONE VOLCANO OBSERVATORY INFORMATION RELEASE
Monday, December 29, 2008 19:07 MST (Tuesday, December 30, 2008 02:07 UTC)

YELLOWSTONE VOLCANO (CAVW#1205-01-)
44.43°N 110.67°W, Summit Elevation 9203 ft (2805 m)
Volcano Alert Level: NORMAL
Aviation Color Code: GREEN

Earthquake swarm beneath Yellowstone Lake continues.

PRESS RELEASE FROM YVO PARTNER UNIVERSITY OF UTAH SEISMOGRAPH STATIONS

Released: December 29, 2008 05:00 PM MST

The University of Utah Seismograph Stations reports that a notable swarm of earthquakes has been underway since December 26 beneath Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park, three to six miles south-southeast of Fishing Bridge, Wyoming. This energetic sequence of events was most intense on December 27, when the largest number of events of magnitude 3 and larger occurred.

The largest of the earthquakes was a magnitude 3.9 (revised from magnitude 3.8) at 10:15 pm MST on Dec. 27. The sequence has included nine events of magnitude 3 to 3.9 and approximately 24 of magnitude 2 to 3 at the time of this release. A total of more than 250 events large enough to be located have occurred in this swarm. Reliable depths of the larger events are up to a few miles. Visitors and National Park Service (NPS) employees in the Yellowstone Lake area reported feeling the largest of these earthquakes.

Earthquakes are a common occurrence in the Yellowstone National Park area, an active volcanic-tectonic area averaging 1,000 to 2,000 earthquakes a year. Yellowstone’s 10,000 geysers and hot springs are the result of this geologic activity. A summary of Yellowstone’s volcanic history is available on the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory web site (listed below). This December 2008 earthquake sequence is the most intense in this area for some years and is centered on the east side of the Yellowstone caldera. Scientists cannot identify any causative fault or other feature without further analysis. Seismologists continue to monitor and analyze the data and will issue new information if the situation warrants it.

The University of Utah operates a seismic network in Yellowstone National Park in conjunction with the National Park Service and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). These three institutions are partners in the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory.

Data are transmitted to the University in real-time by radio and satellite links from a network of 28 seismographs in the Yellowstone area and are available on the web. Seismologists continue to analyze data from this swarm of earthquakes and provide updates to the NPS and USGS and to the public via the following web pages.

Information on U.S. earthquake activity including Yellowstone can be viewed at the U.S. Geological Survey web site: http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/recenteqsus/

Information on earthquakes can also be viewed at the University of Utah Seismograph Stations web site:
http://www.seis.utah.edu/.

Seismographic recordings from Yellowstone seismograph stations can be viewed online at:
http://www.quake.utah.edu/helicorder/heli/yellowstone/index.html.

Persons who felt any of the earthquakes are encouraged to fill out a survey form on the USGS ‘Did You Feel It?’ web site: http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/dyfi/.

Geologic information, maps, and monitoring information for Yellowstone can be found on the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory web site at: http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/yvo/.


The Yellowstone Volcano Observatory (YVO) is a partnership of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Yellowstone National Park, and University of Utah to strengthen the long-term monitoring of volcanic and earthquake unrest in the Yellowstone National Park region. Yellowstone is the site of the largest and most diverse collection of natural thermal features in the world and the first National Park. YVO is one of the five USGS Volcano Observatories that monitor volcanoes within the United States for science and public safety.

http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/yvo/


25 posted on 12/29/2008 6:34:07 PM PST by ETL (Smoking gun evidence on ALL the ObamaRat-commie connections at my newly revised FR Home/About page)
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To: MittFan08


26 posted on 12/29/2008 6:37:10 PM PST by TonyStark
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To: MittFan08

If yellowstone ever goes off, “Locally” means the US, part of canada, and the northern part of Mexico. More or less.


27 posted on 12/29/2008 6:37:25 PM PST by patton (+)
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To: MittFan08

Man I hope this thing doesn’t blow. Talk about thief in the night, I was counting on civilization being around until sometime in 2012.


28 posted on 12/29/2008 6:37:32 PM PST by TBall
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Comment #29 Removed by Moderator

To: patton

“If yellowstone ever goes off, “Locally” means the US, part of canada, and the northern part of Mexico.”

You’re talking about a super-eruption. I’m talking about a hydrothermal explosion. I agree, if there’s a super eruption, then the world is screwed. But there are many kinds of events in yellowstone that are much more likely than super-eruptions.


30 posted on 12/29/2008 6:41:44 PM PST by MittFan08
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To: MittFan08
I'm “officially” worried as well.
31 posted on 12/29/2008 6:41:50 PM PST by LiberConservative
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To: coop223

“who are the nature nazi’s going to sue if jellystone blows its top?”

You presume that they will survive hugging a tree in order to save it... (while holding a protest poster blaming someone for the upheaval) (Pompei statues II)


32 posted on 12/29/2008 6:41:53 PM PST by This_far
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To: MittFan08

YELLOWSTONE RISING
Volcano Inflating with Molten Rock at Record Rate:
http://www.unews.utah.edu/p/?r=102507-1

Nov. 8, 2007 - The Yellowstone “supervolcano” rose at a record rate since mid-2004, likely because a Los Angeles-sized, pancake-shaped blob of molten rock was injected 6 miles beneath the slumbering giant, University of Utah scientists report in the journal Science.

“There is no evidence of an imminent volcanic eruption or hydrothermal explosion. That’s the bottom line,” says seismologist Robert B. Smith, lead author of the study and professor of geophysics at the University of Utah. “A lot of calderas [giant volcanic craters] worldwide go up and down over decades without erupting.”

The upward movement of the Yellowstone caldera floor - almost 3 inches (7 centimeters) per year for the past three years - is more than three times greater than ever observed since such measurements began in 1923, says the study in the Nov. 9 issue of Science by Smith, geophysics postdoctoral associate Wu-Lung Chang and colleagues.

“Our best evidence is that the crustal magma chamber is filling with molten rock,” Smith says. “But we have no idea how long this process goes on before there either is an eruption or the inflow of molten rock stops and the caldera deflates again,” he adds.

The magma chamber beneath Yellowstone National Park is a not a chamber of molten rock, but a sponge-like body with molten rock between areas of hot, solid rock.

Chang, the study’s first author, says: “To say if there will be a magma [molten rock] eruption or hydrothermal [hot water] eruption, we need more independent data.”

Calderas such as Yellowstone, California’s Long Valley (site of the Mammoth Lakes ski area) and Italy’s Campi Flegrei (near Naples) huff upward and puff downward repeatedly for decades to tens of thousands of years without catastrophic eruptions.

Smith and Chang conducted the study with University of Utah geophysics doctoral students Jamie M. Farrell and Christine Puskas, and with geophysicist Charles Wicks, of the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif.

Yellowstone: A Gigantic Volcano Atop a Hotspot

Yellowstone is North America’s largest volcanic field, produced by a “hotspot” - a gigantic plume of hot and molten rock - that begins at least 400 miles beneath Earth’s surface and rises to 30 miles underground, where it widens to about 300 miles across. There, blobs of magma or molten rock occasionally break off from the top of the plume, and rise farther, resupplying the magma chamber beneath the Yellowstone caldera.
Previous research indicates the magma chamber begins about 5 miles beneath Yellowstone and extends down to a depth of at least 10 miles. Its heat powers Yellowstone’s geysers and hot springs - the world’s largest hydrothermal field.

As Earth’s crust moved southwest over the Yellowstone hotspot during the past 16.5 million years, it produced more than 140 cataclysmic explosions known as caldera eruptions, the largest but rarest volcanic eruptions known. Remnants of ancient calderas reveal the eruptions began at the Oregon-Idaho-Nevada border some 16.5 million years ago, then moved progressively northeast across what is now the Snake River Plain.

The hotspot arrived under the Yellowstone area sometime after about 4 million years ago, producing gargantuan eruptions there 2 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 most recent giant eruption created the 40-mile-by-25-mile oval-shaped Yellowstone caldera. The caldera walls have eroded away in many areas - although they remain visible in the northwest portion of the park. Yellowstone Lake sits roughly half inside and half outside the eroded caldera. Many smaller volcanic eruptions occurred at Yellowstone between and since the three big blasts, most recently 70,000 years ago. Smaller steam and hot water explosions have been more frequent and more recent.

Measuring a Volcano Getting Pumped Up

In the new study, the scientists measured uplift of the Yellowstone caldera from July 2004 through the end of 2006 with two techniques:

Twelve Global Positioning System (GPS) ground stations that receive timed signals from satellites, making it possible to measure ground uplift precisely.
The European Space Agency’s Envisat satellite, which bounces radar waves off the Yellowstone caldera’s floor.
The measurements showed that from mid-2004 through 2006, the Yellowstone caldera floor rose as fast as 2.8 inches (7 centimeters) per year - and by a total of 7 inches (18 centimeters) during the 30-month period, Chang says.

“The uplift is still going on today but at a little slower rate,” says Smith, adding there is no way to know when it will stop.

Smith says the fastest rate of uplift previously observed at Yellowstone was about 0.8 inch (2 centimeters) per year between 1976 and 1985.

He says that Yellowstone’s recent upward motion may seem small, but is twice as fast as the average rate of horizontal movement along California’s San Andreas fault.

The current uplift is faster than ever observed at Yellowstone, but may not be the fastest ever, since humans weren’t around for its three supervolcano eruptions.

Chang, Smith and colleagues conducted computer simulations to determine what changes in shape of the underground magma chamber best explained the recent uplift.

The simulations or “modeling” suggested the molten rock injected since mid-2004 is a nearly horizontal slab - known to geologists as a sill - that rests about 6 miles (10 kilometers) beneath Yellowstone National Park. The slab sits within and near the top of the pre-existing magma chamber, which resembles two anvil-shaped blobs expanding upward from a common base.

Smith describes the slab’s computer-simulated shape as “kind of like a mattress” about 38 miles long and 12 miles wide, but only tens or hundreds of yards thick.

In reality, he believes the slab resembles a large, spongy pancake formed as molten rock injected from below spread out near the top of the magma chamber.

The pancake of molten rock has an area of about 463 square miles, compared with 469 square miles of land for the City of Los Angeles.

Smith and colleagues believe steam and hot water contribute to uplift of the Yellowstone caldera, particularly during some previous episodes, but evidence indicates molten rock is responsible for most of the current uplift.

Chang says that when rising molten rock reaches the top of the magma chamber, it starts to crystallize and solidify, releasing hot water and gases, pressuring the magma chamber. But gases and steam compress more easily than molten rock, so much greater volumes would be required to explain the volcano’s inflation, the researchers say.

Also, large volumes of steam and hot water usually are no deeper than 2 miles, so they are unlikely to be inflating the magma chamber 6 miles underground, Smith adds.

Ups and Downs at Yellowstone

Conventional surveying of Yellowstone began in 1923. Measurements showed the caldera floor rose 40 inches during 1923-1984, and then fell 8 inches during 1985-1995.

GPS data showed the Yellowstone caldera floor sank 4.4 inches during 1987-1995. From 1995 to 2000, the caldera rose again, but the uplift was greatest - 3 inches - at Norris Geyser Basin, just outside the caldera’s northwest rim.

During 2000-2003, the northwest area rose another 1.4 inches, but the caldera floor itself sank about 1.1 inches. The trend continued during the first half of 2004. Then, in July 2004, the caldera floor began its rapid rate of uplift, followed three months later by sinking of the Norris area that continued until mid-2006.

Smith believes that uplift of the middle of the caldera decreased pressure within rocks along the edges of the giant crater, “so it allowed fluids to flow into the area of increased porosity.” That, in turn, triggered small earthquakes along the edge of the “pancake” of magma. The amount of hot water flowing out of the deflated Norris area is much smaller than the volume of magma injected beneath the caldera, Smith says.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Geological Survey and the Brinson Foundation.

YELLOWSTONE RISING
Volcano Inflating with Molten Rock at Record Rate:
http://www.unews.utah.edu/p/?r=102507-1


33 posted on 12/29/2008 6:42:34 PM PST by ETL (Smoking gun evidence on ALL the ObamaRat-commie connections at my newly revised FR Home/About page)
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To: ETL
IRIS doesn't show much in the Yellowstone area, but there is quite a bit of activity every freaking where else.


34 posted on 12/29/2008 6:43:03 PM PST by UCANSEE2 (The Last Boy Scout)
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To: MrLee

The largest caldera in the whole world
Don’t know if this is it, but we are overdue for something. If it goes, the worse case could be a continent wide (and world wide) population affecting event.


35 posted on 12/29/2008 6:43:27 PM PST by noname07718 (Freedom is never more than one generation from extinction-Ronald Reagan 1993)
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To: All
Sorta scary looking since 12/27/08:

Animation for Utah and Yellowstone Region.

36 posted on 12/29/2008 6:43:52 PM PST by Momaw Nadon ("...with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world.")
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To: briarbey b

This gives a nice picture representation that is easy to understand.

IRIS Seismic Monitor

http://www.iris.edu/seismon/


37 posted on 12/29/2008 6:44:07 PM PST by UCANSEE2 (The Last Boy Scout)
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To: MittFan08

BUMP


38 posted on 12/29/2008 6:44:45 PM PST by angelsonmyside
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To: patton
In the words of 0bozo’s man, never let a crisis go to waste ... or something like that.
Maybe, 0bozo would consider passing on further lodgings in HI and see if vacation arrangements can be made in Yellowstone. Just a thought.
39 posted on 12/29/2008 6:45:04 PM PST by benasawin
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To: MittFan08

Who knows? Varies from annoys a knat, to kills us all.

No trees were killed by this post, but many electrons were seriously annoyed.


40 posted on 12/29/2008 6:45:55 PM PST by patton (+)
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