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To: blam
The Great Plains is not the only source for the world's farms. And this event will NOT block out the sun, it will just cool the climate slightly. There will still be a workable food supply from other farms worldwide. And if worse comes to worse, I live in rural Georgia, getting food will not be that hard, compared to a major urban city.

By the way, after this is over, the ash itself will actually enrich the soil that it cover, allowing for better farming in the future.

18 posted on 08/29/2003 6:15:33 PM PDT by Paul C. Jesup
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To: Paul C. Jesup
"The Great Plains is not the only source for the world's farms. And this event will NOT block out the sun, it will just cool the climate slightly. "

Okay, if you say so.

"What would be the effect of an eruption?

Immediately before the eruption, there would be large earthquakes in the Yellowstone region. The ground would swell further with most of Yellowstone being uplifted. One earthquake would finally break the layer of rock that holds the magma in - and all the pressure the Earth can build up in 640,000 years would be unleashed in a cataclysmic event. Magma would be flung 50 kilometres into the atmosphere. Within a thousand kilometres virtually all life would be killed by falling ash, lava flows and the sheer explosive force of the eruption. Volcanic ash would coat places as far away as Iowa and the Gulf of Mexico. One thousand cubic kilometres of lava would pour out of the volcano, enough to coat the whole of the USA with a layer 5 inches thick. The explosion would have a force 2,500 times that of Mount St. Helens. It would be the loudest noise heard by man for 75,000 years, the time of the last super volcano eruption. Within minutes of the eruption tens of thousands would be dead.

The long-term effects would be even more devastating. The thousands of cubic kilometres of ash that would shoot into the atmosphere could block out light from the sun, making global temperatures plummet. This is called a nuclear winter. As during the Sumatra eruption a large percentage of the world's plant life would be killed by the ash and drop in temperature. Also, virtually the entire of the grain harvest of the Great Plains would disappear in hours, as it would be coated in ash. Similar effects around the world would cause massive food shortages. If the temperatures plummet by the 21 degrees they did after the Sumatra eruption the Yellowstone super volcano eruption could truly be an extinction level event.

23 posted on 08/29/2003 6:27:43 PM PDT by blam
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To: Paul C. Jesup
You should read about the global effects of the Krakatoa eruption (1890ish). It was a HUGE eruption but tiny in comparison to a super volcano. The climate did indeed cool after krakatoa, and the skies did not clear for 6 months to a year. Read about it sometime, then imagine a super eruption.
61 posted on 08/30/2003 8:55:38 AM PDT by jpsb
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