. Energy News .




.
SHAKE AND BLOW
'Atlantis' volcano gives tips for mega-eruptions
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Feb 1, 2012


Around 1630 BC, a super-volcano blew apart the Aegean island of Santorini, an event so violent that some theorists say it nurtured the legend of Atlantis.

More than three and a half millennia later, the big blast is yielding forensic clues which help the search to predict future cataclysmic eruptions, scientists said on Wednesday.

Bigger than the destruction of Indonesia's Krakatoa in 1883, the Santorini event was a so-called caldera eruption, a kind that happens mercifully only at intervals of tens of thousands of years, sometimes far more.

The chamber of a volcano becomes progressively filled with magma but lacks vents from which to discharge this dangerous buildup of gas and molten rock.

The pressure cooker culminates in catastrophe, ripping off the top of the volcano and leaving a depression called a caldera, the Spanish word for cauldron.

One of the great unknowns is when a caldera-type episode is in the offing.

That question is a particular concern for Yellowstone Park in Wyoming, a truly massive volcano classified as "high-threat" by the US Geological Survey (USGS).

Vulcanologists led by French-based Timothy Druitt scrutinised crystals of a mineral called feldspar that had been ejected from the Santorini eruption.

They looked for traces of magnesium, strontium and titanium, deposited in waves over thousands of years by the slowly advancing magma. The chemicals, they found, were a telltale of events over time.

From these signatures, the picture that emerges is of final, fatal spurts of magma injection which happened in the last decades -- maybe even just the final months -- before the great eruption.

The study, reported in the journal Nature, chimes with other research that suggests magma reservoirs in caldera volcanoes undergo a "pulsatory" buildup which probably accelerate before eruption.

If so, the findings are useful for vulcanologists poring over Yellowstone and other hotspots. They could detect such pulses using satellite technology, which records ground deformation over time as the volcano bulges, and ground-motion sensors.

But only close familiarity helps build a "pulse" model which gives a good idea of when a volcano is about to blow its lid.

"Long-term monitoring of large, dormant caldera systems, even in remote parts of the world, is essential if late-stage growth spurts of shallow magma reservoirs are to be detected well in advance of caldera-forming eruptions," says the paper.

Also called the Minoan Eruption, the Santorini event spewed out up to 60 cubic kilometres (14.4 cubic miles) of material, causing ash clouds that devastated Bronze Age civilisations in the Aegean.

Some theorists say the event inspired Plato's tale, written some 1,300 years later, of a circular island-empire inhabited by people of great culture and wealth, that sank to the depths of the sea in a single day and night of earthquakes and floods.

Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



SHAKE AND BLOW
Satellite snaps Costa Rica volcano action
San Jose, Costa Rica (UPI) Jan 25, 2012
A new vent has opened on one of Costa Rica's active volcanoes, the latest activity following a series of small eruptions beginning in 2010, researchers say. NASA's Terra satellite captured an image of the new vent, located on the southeastern flank of the Turrialba volcano's West Crater, on Jan. 12, a release from the space agency said. The Observatorio Vulcanologico y Sismologic ... read more


SHAKE AND BLOW
NASA Finds 2011 Ninth-Warmest Year on Record

Satellite observes spatiotemporal variations in mid-upper tropospheric methane over China

NASA Sees Repeating La Nina Hitting its Peak

Map project accuses Google users of edits

SHAKE AND BLOW
ESA Director General praises UK space innovation

Lockheed Martin-Built GPS Satellites Reach 150 Years of Combined On Orbit Service

LED lights point shoppers in the right direction

Opening of UK site producing the heart of Galileo

SHAKE AND BLOW
Living on the edge: An innovative model of mangrove-hammock boundaries in Florida

Restored wetlands rarely equal condition of original wetlands

Rate of tropical timber harvest a concern

$1.6 million fine for cutting down trees

SHAKE AND BLOW
What's the State of America's Biofuel Industry?

Microbubbles provide new boost for biofuel production

Take the Ethanol Challenge by Husqvarna

NPRA Calls on EPA to Reconsider Cellulosic Biofuel Volumes

SHAKE AND BLOW
Pepco Buys UMD's Solar Decathlon-Winner for Public Education

Arizona's Buckeye Union HSD Dedicates Solar Generation Project

Solar Industry Submits Comments on Draft Rules for Solar Development on Public Lands

DIY Solar Heating and Solar Hot Water

SHAKE AND BLOW
New style turbine to harvest wind energy

Natural Power appointed as Owner's Engineer on 20.5MW Sixpenny Wood wind farm

China voices 'deep concern' over US wind tower probe

Power generation is blowing in the wind

SHAKE AND BLOW
Gloucester, Yanzhou in giant $8bn coal play: report

Four trapped miners found dead in China: Govt

Five rescued from collapsed Chinese mine

Coal mine collapse traps 12 in China

SHAKE AND BLOW
'Trained separatists' behind Tibetan unrest: China

Hong Kong paper runs ad insulting mainland 'locusts'

Rebel China village takes first step in democratic vote

Unwilling to upset China, West holds back on Tibet


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement