Molehill Mountain Detected From Space 16
SEWilco writes: "A four-inch mound was detected in Oregon recently near the Three Sisters volcanoes. Unlike a molehill, it's 10 miles across and was detected by radar from a satellite. The USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory compared two radar images which were taken four years apart and produced this image of the uplift. A USGS statement says the cause is uncertain, but a new pool of magma is suspected. There are no signs of pending eruptions."
Re:Eruption from beginning to end? (Score:1)
As another reply mentions, there have been many studies of assorted other earth motions in the past. Assorted sophisticated equipment has been scattered across California and Japan for decades, along with active volcanic areas. Indeed, one of the deaths at Mount St. Helens [usgs.gov] was David A. Johnston who had taken laser measurements 90 minutes earlier. Two geologists were flying overhead when the eruption began.
Hope It's Not A Caldera (Score:1)
Intrusive Rock (Score:1)
Re:Eruption from beginning to end? (Score:1)
Hehe! (Score:2)
Your assignment now is to draw up a movie poster for that. Maybe you can get it filmed - that's a Troma title if ever I heard one.
"Smear'd with gumms of glutenous heat, I touch..." - Comus, John Milton
Eruption from beginning to end? (Score:1)
Looks more like an earthquake or something (Score:2)
Re:Except (Score:2)
Look at the purty pic-a-ma-tures (Score:2)
Each full color band from blue to red represents about 2.8 cm (slightly more than 1 inch) of ground movement in the direction of the radar satellite. In this case, four concentric color bands show that the surface moved toward the satellite (mostly upward) by as much as 10 cm (about 4 inches) sometime between August 1996 and October 2000...
It isn't "rippled" ground; it is a single raise in the land. The colorscheme they used is just confusing.Re:Eruption from beginning to end? (Score:2)
Re:Looks more like an earthquake or something (Score:2)
Re:Eruption from beginning to end? (Score:1)
Excited?? Hah! Spoken like someone who hasn't had to live through a volcano! I live about 30 miles from the Sisters, can see them out my window, and grew up in Spokane, WA. Seeing pitch black at 3pm on May 18, 1980, left me with the sense of not ever wanting to be around for another volcano blast. I think two eruptions in my lifetime would be extraordinary, eh? :)
Anyway, the US Pacific Northwest is blessed with weather that isn't very often destructive, but the mountains, well that's another story. Still, it's better than living on the bank of the Mississippi River, that's for damn sure.
Well, writing this two days after the article was posted makes me believe the odds of anybody reading me are slim ;-) Sorry I didn't notice it before.
Except (Score:3)
Except for the giant pool of magma forming underneath the pacific northwest, that could be a sign.
also interesting (Score:1)
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Re:Eruption from beginning to end? (Score:2)
similarly, in Italy near Vesuvius (which blew up in AD. 79) ground movement in the sorounding area has been observed. Particularly near the town of Pozzuli which is situated above a magma-chamber. In the last 20 years the ground has been moving mostly upwards more than a meter! so that previously sunken Roman temples once again is above the water.
Yours Yazeran
Plan: To go to Mars one day with a hammer!
Re:Except (Score:1)
Of course, if they're wrong and one is coming, it might be a good idea to get out of the area.
Hmmm...Is that why Boeing left Seattle?