Mashable 01月04日
Scientists reveal why the mighty Yellowstone isnt ready to blow
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最新研究表明,黄石公园目前没有火山喷发的迹象。尽管其历史上曾发生过毁灭性的超级火山爆发,但现在黄石公园地下的岩浆储量浓度较低,不足以驱动火山喷发所需的压力和热量。地质学家利用大地电磁法探测发现,黄石公园的岩浆储藏区如同海绵,孔隙中的岩浆并未饱和,目前远未达到喷发临界点。即使未来岩浆再次涌入,也会有数十年甚至数百年的预警时间,包括强烈的地震活动和地面变形。因此,黄石公园目前火山风险较低,主要以温泉和间歇泉等热活动为主。

🌋黄石公园历史上曾发生过超级火山爆发,但目前地下的岩浆储量浓度较低,不足以引发喷发。

🧲地质学家使用大地电磁法探测,发现黄石公园的岩浆储藏区如同海绵,孔隙中的岩浆并未饱和。

⚠️未来即使岩浆再次涌入,也会有数十年甚至数百年的预警,包括地震和地面变形等明显迹象。

♨️目前黄石公园以温泉和间歇泉等热活动为主,火山风险较低。

There's not even a hint of a looming eruption at Yellowstone.

But you might wonder why, considering its violent past: Yellowstone has hosted "supereruptions" — the most explosive type of volcanic blast that would be regionally devastating, and blanket a large swathe of the U.S. in ash. These blasts were much larger than any in recorded history. (The last eruption, though not "super," happened some 70,000 years ago and poured lava over the present-day national park.)

New research reveals why the famously steamy park, hosting over 500 hot geysers, shows no signs of blowing its top. These days, the reservoirs of magma (molten rock) that feed Yellowstone hold pretty low concentrations of this magma. They simply don't contain enough volcanic fuel to drive the heat and pressure that would stoke an eruption.

"We can definitely say that these areas could not source an eruption in the present day," Ninfa Bennington, a U.S. Geological Survey research geophysicist who led the study recently published in Nature, told Mashable.

There are different reservoirs, or pods, of magma below the Yellowstone Caldera, which is the sprawling basin formed during an immense eruption and dramatic collapse some 631,000 years ago. You can think of each reservoir like a sponge, filled with pores. There's some magma in these pores spaces, but it's not nearly saturated.

One future day, these sponges may fill up with magma and reach a critical percentage — wherein immense pressure builds beneath the ground and spawns an eruption. Today, however, there is no explosive threat.

"We're so far off from that right now," Bennington said.

Modeled ashfall from a Yellowstone supereruption. Credit: USGS / Mastin et al.
The most destructive type of eruptions at Yellowstone, which form great depressions called calderas, are by far the rarest. Credit: USGS

To grasp what's transpiring in these critical reservoirs of magma today, the geologists used a technique called magnetotellurics. In contrast to radar or sonar, the scientists don't create or beam signals to discern what lies beyond or below. Instead, these surveys capitalize on the currents naturally created by Earth's electromagnetic field. And magma, due to its composition, is really good at conducting electricity, allowing insight into its presence deep beneath Earth's surface.

"It could be a long, long time."

The surveys, beyond revealing Yellowstone's inability to host an eruption today, showed that the most primitive magma flowing up from Earth's mantle to Yellowstone connects directly to a reservoir in the northeast region of the Yellowstone Caldera. This suggests this northeast region would become the future center of volcanic activity in Yellowstone.

But there's no evidence of those reservoirs filling up. "It could be a long, long time," Bennington said.

If magma does once again snake its way from deep inside Earth and saturate these shallower reservoirs, an eruption wouldn't be a surprise. We'd have many decades, if not centuries, of warning. The moving magma would trigger swarms of potent earthquakes, and the ground would majorly deform.

"These parameters are well monitored, so there will be ample warning of any potential future eruption," the U.S. Geological Survey says.

Today, Yellowstone remains a place of low volcanic risk. Sure, there are sometimes small explosions stoked by hot water and steam. But it's mostly thermal pools and awesome geysers, reminding us of what could potentially awake, one distant day.

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黄石公园 火山喷发 岩浆 地质研究 大地电磁法
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