From Deseret News archives:

Magma rising fast under Yellowstone

But according to U. study, no eruption is likely for a long time

Published: Monday, Nov. 12, 2007 12:35 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
In the 2005 film "Supervolcano," the Yellowstone caldera erupts, disastrously spreading deep volcanic dust throughout the West. The film's tag line was, "This is a true story. It just hasn't happened yet."

The Yellowstone region really is a gigantic caldera, left by previous supervolcano eruptions. Stretching back to 4 million years ago, Yellowstone supervolcano blasts covered what's now the western half of the continental United States with inches to feet of volcanic ash, according to the University of Utah.

But could it happen again? Almost certainly not in the lifetime of anyone alive today. But a new study shows that magma deep beneath the ground surface, which could be the source of a future eruption, is rising at a record rate.

The caldera floor, the ground of Yellowstone, has risen about 3 inches a year for the past three years. The rise is more than three times greater than the fastest observed since monitoring began in 1923, the study says.

"It's a surprising finding to find that something has changed by a factor of three over historic trends," said Robert B. Smith, professor of geophysics at the University of Utah and lead author of the study. "It's very key, scientifically."

Story continues below
According to a study that Smith and colleagues published in the Nov. 9 edition of the magazine Science, a wide layer of magma has been rising. The hot rock drifts upward because it is less dense than the medium around it and thus buoyant; Smith compared it to a bubble going up through a bottle of honey.

Besides Smith, researchers on the team were postdoctoral associate Wu-Lung Chang, doctoral students Jamie M. Farrell and Christine Puskas of the U., and geophysicist Charles Wicks of the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif.

About six miles beneath the surface, hot melted rock is moving into the magma chamber, causing the ground to deform. Most of the gigantic Yellowstone caldera is affected. The caldera is around 37 miles long by 25 miles wide; the area of ground deformation is about 37 miles by 19 miles.

The molten rock is shaped like a mattress, about 38 miles long and 12 miles wide "but only tens or hundreds of yards thick," says a U. press release.

In a telephone interview, Smith said the magma is moving in around the middle part of Earth's crust. It is by no means near the surface, he added, "but it's down where we seismically imaged a magma chamber."

Surface deformation was measured through GPS readings and measurements by a European Space Agency satellite that aimed radar at the caldera floor.

Recent comments

people really need to know about this it really important.
they say...

jay | April 28, 2008 at 11:01 a.m.

The last major Caldera Eruption at Toba, Indonesia, about 70,000...

Matus1976 | April 25, 2008 at 12:37 p.m.

Scientists are certainly adept with their readings and measurements....

grandma101 | Jan. 22, 2008 at 10:21 p.m.

Image
Graphic By Wu-lung Chang

Shape of the magma chamber can be seen under outline of the Yellowstone caldera. The red slice is magma moving upward recently.

previousnext

Latest comments

Hall's legacy measured today

Can someone please tell me which top 10 team Max has won? I hope the Jeff...

Obama and GOP differ over job aid

The old recipie for good economy is to just cut taxes to spur investment and...

Letters: Respectful gesture

Respect? Why show respect for another human being who's opinions and...

The problem is, Sarah Palin ist not a competent politician. She begs to be...

BYU's old uniforms?

Please do tell which of his facts were stupid? Your best ever got smocked at...

Korver's return hits snag

Honestly. Kyle cannot be moved with the contract. I would rather see CJ<...

So many conclusions, based on false assumptions, so many haters, with...

Jazz share in win over Bulls

If Carlos continues to play like this instead of hearing "boo" at ESA, maybe...

BYU's old uniforms?

With all that tradition they can't seem to compete on the national stage....

A.I. return would not surprise

Hint: You notice (like I predicted) no mention of any Jazz interest in...

Advertisements