Super
volcano awakening in Italy?
It looks like we may be in for an earth-shattering explosion. A dormant super volcano appears to be stirring under the Phlegraen Fields of Naples in Italy. Rising soil temperatures and surface deformation in the area have alarmed seismologists. In the distant past, volcanic super eruptions caused global climate change responsible for mass extinctions of plant and animal species.
It looks like we may be in for an earth-shattering explosion. A dormant super volcano appears to be stirring under the Phlegraen Fields of Naples in Italy. Rising soil temperatures and surface deformation in the area have alarmed seismologists. In the distant past, volcanic super eruptions caused global climate change responsible for mass extinctions of plant and animal species.
30
January, 2013
So
far, scientists are unable to model the potential consequences of an
awakening super volcano.
Latest
studies show that the Phlegraen Fields have actually been swelling
above sea level at a rate of 3 cm per month. Micro quakes and large
amounts of gases accumulated in soil indicate that the volcano may be
preparing to erupt, says Vladimir Kiryanov, Assistant Professor of
Geology at the St. Petersburg University.
"The
Phlegraen Fields are a super volcano. Yellowstone in the United
States and Toba in Indonesia are also super volcanoes capable of
spewing more than 1,000 cubic km of magma. These are catastrophic
eruptions. There was a huge volcanic eruption in the Phlegraen Fields
some 30,000-40,000 years ago. Volcanic ash from that eruption is
still found in the Mediterranean, Bulgaria, Ukraine, and even in
Russia. We are now seeing the expansion of a magma pocket, which
means that there might be an eruption at a certain time."
Super
eruptions of such magnitude may produce the so-called “volcanic
winter” effect when sulfur gases and ash will reach the
stratosphere and cover the globe with thick ash clouds that solar
rays will be unable to penetrate. Condensed sulfur trioxides will
react with moisture, forming sulfuric acid. Downpours of sulfuric
acid will hit the Earth. Scientists have obtained new evidence of a
similar cataclysm following the eruption of the Toba super volcano on
island of Sumatra in Indonesia about 74,000 years ago. But today,
things promise to be even more devastating. Suffice it to recall the
havoc wreaked by a minor increase in volcanic activity in Iceland in
2010 on air transportation over Europe.
Super
eruptions occurred so rarely that it is virtually impossible to
calculate the approximate time span between the first and last stages
of a future potential eruption. In the 1970s, the Phlegraen Fields
inflated by more than 50 cm. There were even cracks in house walls.
But then the process slackened. Apparently, the fact itself that a
magma chamber is being filled with magma may or may not signal any
immediate eruption. Alexei Sobisevich, laboratory chief at the
Institute of Volcanology and Geophysics of the Russian Academy of
Sciences, shares his view:
"It
actually seems to be a long-term precursor. A magma chamber may be
filled up within a span ranging from decades to centuries. Many
mounts grow by 5 cm per year. This is a natural process."
Some
scientists hold that the volcanic system of the Earth is becoming
increasingly tense and that underground cavities are full of magma
threatening to burst out any moment. Whether this will be a super
eruption or a string of smaller eruptions, we should prepare for the
worst.
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