Hot
Lava: The Planet’s Largest Supervolcano Setting Earthquake Swarm
Records
A
continuing earthquake swarm located over the monstrous Yellowstone
caldera in the US state of Wyoming has now provided over 2,300
tremors since its June inception.
4
September, 2017
According
to instrument documentation, as of August 30, 2,357
earthquakes were recorded in the region around the
Yellowstone supervolcano, the largest active caldera in North
America, since the beginning of the swarm in early
June.
Most
of the temblors are in the range of magnitude 0 or 1,
and many have been recorded at magnitude 2 or 3 —
relatively light earthquakes — but it is the sheer number
of events that has seismologists sitting up and taking
notice.
Observing
seismic activity at Yellowstone, Jamie Farrell, a research
professor at the nearby University of Utah, suggested that
the swarm was "nothing out of the ordinary" but "does
occasionally have little bursts of activity that lasts for a
few hours," cited by Newsweek
But
while most of the quakes are small enough to go unnoticed
by visitors to the popular US national park, the ongoing
2017 summer swarm is now been documented as one of the
longest and largest since records began being kept, according
to Yahoo news.
Only
an October 1985 earthquake swarm at the legendary volcano was
larger, lasting about three months and documenting over 3,000
earthquakes.
Earthquakes
swarms do not necessarily signal a volcanic eruption in Yellowstone.
But seismologists and scientists continue to keep an eye on the
activity over
the
enormous 1500-square-mile caldera, where bubbling magma lies a mere
five to seven miles below the surface.
The
last major eruption of the Yellowstone supervolcano, one of the
Earth's largest, occurred some 640,000 years ago and ejected
about 80,000 times the amount of airborne particulates —
including ash — spewed by the deadly eruption of Mount
St. Helens in 1980.
The
US Geological Survey, however, shows the current volcano alert level
in Yellowstone National Park to be normal, and displays the
aviation color code as green, indicating no current threat
to flights in the region.
Recently,
a scientist with the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, observed
that "for magma to reach the surface a new vent needs to be
created, which requires a lot of intense geological activity,"
according to Newsweek.
The
scientist added that, "we would need to see considerably
more and larger earthquakes, combined with contemporaneous
ground deformation, steam explosions and changes in gas and heat
discharge, prior to moving the [current green] alert level."
"None
of that has occurred," he stated.
The quakes have been felt as far away as Logan and Ogden in northern Utah and Basalt, Arimo, Pocatello, Chubbuck, American Falls, Fort Hall, Aberdeen, Blackfoot and Springfield in Southeast Idaho.
EARTHQUAKE SWARM WON'T STOP: 62 earthquakes have struck Southeast Idaho since Saturday evening
2
September, 2017
The
strongest earthquake to hit the region in years as well as 61 smaller
quakes occurred Saturday night to Sunday night in Southeast Idaho,
startling tens of thousands of residents.
Authorities
said it does not appear that the quakes have caused any injuries to
people or damage to structures
The
quakes were felt in Caribou County, where all 62 occurred, as well as
in cities in northern Utah and throughout Southeast Idaho. It's
unknown when the earthquake swarm will end. Earthquake swarms have
been known to continue for weeks or even months.
In
recent decades Southeast Idaho has seen infrequent instances in which
one to three weak earthquakes occur near the Western Wyoming border.
Local authorities say they cannot ever remember any earthquake swarm
in Southeast Idaho that comes even close to the current series of
temblors shaking the region.
Five
of the quakes occurred early Sunday evening — the last being at
6:36 p.m. They were preceded by five quakes on Sunday afternoon, 19
on Sunday morning and 33 on Saturday night. All 62 of the quakes were
reported by University of Utah Seismograph Stations.
Bannock
County Sheriff Lorin Nielsen said he's been a law enforcement officer
in Southeast Idaho for over 40 years and during that time there's
never previously been so many earthquakes occurring in such a short
time frame. He said at the most there have been up to three
earthquakes that have occurred in short succession along the East
Idaho-Western Wyoming border. The dozens of earthquakes that occurred
from Saturday night through early Sunday evening are unprecedented,
the sheriff said.
"I've
never seen anything like this," Nielsen said. "My wife
asked if we should leave the house."
The
earthquakes occurred starting shortly before 6 p.m. Saturday. The
second quake to strike was at 5:56 p.m. Saturday and it was the most
powerful thus far. The quake was about 10 miles east of Soda Springs
and registered at 5.3 on the Richter scale — strong enough to
possibly damage buildings. It's been years since Southeast Idaho has
experienced a quake of over 5.0 on the Richter scale.
The
earthquakes have occurred at various distances east, southeast and
northeast of Soda Springs, Caribou County's largest city. The
farthest away were about 18 miles southeast and northeast of Soda
Springs and the closest was about 2 miles east of the city.
The quakes have been felt as far away as Logan and Ogden in northern Utah and Basalt, Arimo, Pocatello, Chubbuck, American Falls, Fort Hall, Aberdeen, Blackfoot and Springfield in Southeast Idaho.
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