Thursday, 3 April 2014

Yellowstone National Park Still In Danger After Earthquake March 30?

Yellowstone Earthquake, Yellowstone Volcano, Yellowstone Volcanic Eruption, Yellowstone Lava

 The shake was the biggest to hit the legendary reserve in 34 years, however that doesn't mean Yellowstone's sleeping supervolcano is getting prepared to spew, or even belch, scientists say.

Yellowstone Volcanic Eruption Chances, Yellowstone Earthquake

The epicenter of the quake was to be found 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) north-northeast of Norris Geyser Basin in the northwest bend of Wyoming. The tremor struck at 6:34 a.m. local time and was go after by at least 25 aftershocks in less than two hours, with the biggest of magnitude 3.1, according to the U.S. Geological 

Survey.Yellowstone Volcano, Yellowstone Volcanic Eruption, 640,000 years ago





Yellowstone is whispered to sit over an underground chamber of magma rising from Earth's mantle; the park's much-visited geysers and hot springs are results of this underlying volcanism. The last full-scale explosion at the location occurred 640,000 years ago; collapsing ground from that catastrophic event formed the oval-shaped, 40- by 25-mile (64- by 40-kilometer) Yellowstone caldera. A smaller, however still foremost, eruption occurred 70,000 years ago, spilling the lava that made the Pitchstone Plateau.

Yellowstone Earthquake, Yellowstone Volcano According to Epoch Times


According to Epoch Times, several videos of such incidents have been posted online freshly, one of which shows a herd of buffalo supposedly leaving the park and “running for their lives.” even though natives behind the discussion concede there’s no way to forecast when the park’s gigantic volcano could erupt, they consider the reaction of the Yellowstone’s animals could signal some sort of alert.

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