How can lightning and solar storms be used to map magma beneath Yellowstone? Through magnetotelluric imaging, which provides ...
An expert from the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory has revealed some of the most likely impacts of an eruption in the famed national park.
Using magnetotellurics, researchers produced a detailed picture of the magma beneath Yellowstone, offering insights into a ...
Large explosive eruptions occur in Yellowstone around once every 700,000 years, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
“The western part of the Yellowstone caldera is waning,” said Ninfa Bennington, a volcano geophysicist with ... as a single underground lake of lava beneath volcanos, but newer mapping and ...
Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles is a weekly column written by scientists and collaborators of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory ... swaths of land with thick lava and ash flows?
"When we used magnetotellurics, we were able to see, actually, there’s not a lot there," said Ninfa Bennington, lead author ...
geophysicist of the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, told the Washington Post. “Nowhere in Yellowstone do we have regions that are capable of eruption,” the magma maven explained. In other words ...
There's not even a hint of a looming eruption at Yellowstone. But you might wonder ... though not "super," happened some 70,000 years ago and poured lava over the present-day national park.) ...
The Yellowstone supervolcano is stirring in its sleep. Scientists say the enormous magma pool is moving. Researchers from the ...