Collarspace Discussion Forums


Home  Login  Search 

Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under Washington state


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid >> Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under Washington state Page: [1]
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under Wash... - 10/26/2009 3:43:08 PM   
Sanity


Posts: 22039
Joined: 6/14/2006
From: Nampa, Idaho USA
Status: offline

I toured all three of the volcanoes that this article discusses two years ago, its a spectacular area. Rainier and St. Helens up close are awe inspiring, and Adams is no molehill! The photo is one that I shot of Rainier, while up on Rainier in July of 2007.

quote:



WASHINGTON -- A vast pool of molten rock in the continental crust that underlies southwestern Washington state could supply magma to three active volcanoes in the Cascade Mountains -- Mount St. Helens , Mount Rainier and Mount Adams -- according to a new study that's causing a stir among scientists. The study, published Sunday in the magazine Nature Geoscience, concluded that the magma pool among the three mountains could be the "most widespread magma-bearing area of continental crust discovered so far."

Other scientists dismiss the existence of an underground vat of magma covering potentially hundreds of square miles as "farfetched" and "highly unlikely." Rather than magma heated to 1,300 to 1,400 degrees, some think it could be water. They also discount speculation that a so-called "super volcano" such as the one under the Yellowstone National Park area might be beneath the region. They say there's no credible evidence to suggest a need to overhaul the volcanic hazard assessments for the three mountains.

Even so, the study is another piece of the puzzle as scientists try to understand the deep plumbing of volcanoes and, perhaps eventually, learn how to predict their eruptions better.

In the late 1980s, scientists discovered a massive underground electromagnetic anomaly known as the Southern Washington Cascades Conductor. However, the two-year study published Sunday is the first to suggest that it may be the source of magma for Mounts St. Helens, Rainier and Adams.

(Full article here).


Technical paper: Distribution of melt beneath Mount St Helens and Mount Adams inferred from magnetotelluric data






Attachment (1)

_____________________________

Inside Every Liberal Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out
Profile   Post #: 1
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/26/2009 9:59:05 PM   
outlier


Posts: 1111
Joined: 10/22/2005
Status: offline
Sanity,

Interesting article.  Thank you for posting it.
And a special thank you for the picture, it is simply beautiful.

Outlier


_____________________________

Avatar from xkcd.com

"A happy sex life may take years to achieve, but it’s worth it in the long run.
Worth the time, the thought - or rather, the thoughtfulness - and, often,
the waiting." Pete Seeger

(in reply to Sanity)
Profile   Post #: 2
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/27/2009 6:00:49 AM   
pahunkboy


Posts: 33061
Joined: 2/26/2006
From: Central Pennsylvania
Status: offline
there is also a nuke leak up there. it will be some years before it hits the public water supply.   it is pretty up there.. one area of the country I never been to.

(in reply to outlier)
Profile   Post #: 3
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/27/2009 6:10:19 AM   
Louve00


Posts: 1674
Joined: 2/1/2009
Status: offline
It is a beautiful picture.  Living in Fl a big hill is as mountainous as it gets.  I admit I've never given much thought to volcanoes and the magma underneath.  If I lived closer I'd no doubt know more by sheer fact of me being close to it.  I guess I should learn more about it.

_____________________________

For the great majority of mankind are satisfied with appearance, as though they were realities and are often more influenced by the things that seem than by those that are. - Niccolo Machiavelli

(in reply to pahunkboy)
Profile   Post #: 4
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/27/2009 6:10:56 PM   
dcnovice


Posts: 37282
Joined: 8/2/2006
Status: offline
Lovely photo, Sanity!

_____________________________

No matter how cynical you become,
it's never enough to keep up.

JANE WAGNER, THE SEARCH FOR SIGNS OF
INTELLIGENT LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE

(in reply to Louve00)
Profile   Post #: 5
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/27/2009 8:18:50 PM   
Sanity


Posts: 22039
Joined: 6/14/2006
From: Nampa, Idaho USA
Status: offline

Thanks outlier. dc, Louve.

Here's one I shot of Mount St. Helens from a distance, which shows how the forest has yet to completely recover from her 1980 eruption, and what appear to be clouds above her is steam and gas as it escapes her crater.

Yep, she's still smokin' after all these years...

Its a beautiful trip if you ever think about making it. Its fantastic country.


_____________________________

Inside Every Liberal Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out

(in reply to outlier)
Profile   Post #: 6
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/27/2009 8:22:21 PM   
Sanity


Posts: 22039
Joined: 6/14/2006
From: Nampa, Idaho USA
Status: offline
St Helens







Attachment (1)

_____________________________

Inside Every Liberal Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out

(in reply to Sanity)
Profile   Post #: 7
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/27/2009 8:23:26 PM   
aphotic


Posts: 119
Joined: 5/17/2009
Status: offline
There is a super volcano nearby underneath Yellowstone Park. If you study the geography, I wouldn't be suprised if there was a link between the plates and this "massive pool of magma". It is fascinating though, thank you for posting. Ngorongoro crater in Africa is actually a caldera, not a meteor crater, which spawned a beautiful conservation area. I don't know if Yellowstone and Washington are ripe for such a tragic creation, but they may have already been so in the past.

This was a fantastically interesting post, even if it has few replies!

(in reply to Sanity)
Profile   Post #: 8
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/27/2009 9:00:15 PM   
Sanity


Posts: 22039
Joined: 6/14/2006
From: Nampa, Idaho USA
Status: offline

The cascade volcanoes are theoretically completely separate from the Yellowstone supervolcano hot spot, and the magma that feeds them is very deep under the surface of the Earth. The hot spot thats currently beneath Yellowstone is very close to the surface of the Earth and is said to have once been under the general area where my main profile photo was shot, which is at the West entrance to the Newberry National Volcanic Monument of Central Oregon. The creek in the photo  is Paulina creek which flows out of Paulina Lake, one of the twin lakes inside the relatively large Newberry caldera. The cliffs and boulders behind me in that shot are lava...

There is a trail of lava flows and lava tubes and volcanic peaks going from Newberry in Central Oregon all along the Snake River Plain in Southern Idaho to Yellowstone caldera, the theory being that the tectonic plate all that sits on moved over the hotspot and caused the massive scarring and lava deposits that are highly evident over a very wide swath of land all through Central Oregon and Southern Idaho, along the Snake River Plain and the Treasure Valley.

Here I am at Craters Of The Moon National Monument in South Central Idaho, one of  the many places that moved over the Yellowston hot spot through the ages.







Attachment (1)

_____________________________

Inside Every Liberal Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out

(in reply to aphotic)
Profile   Post #: 9
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/28/2009 4:26:26 AM   
Louve00


Posts: 1674
Joined: 2/1/2009
Status: offline
Damn you live in pretty country, Sanity.  That picture of St Helen is amazing.  In Craters of the Moon, are you sitting on lava, too?  (looks like brown grass in the picture lol).  But its truly gorgeous.  Thanks!!

_____________________________

For the great majority of mankind are satisfied with appearance, as though they were realities and are often more influenced by the things that seem than by those that are. - Niccolo Machiavelli

(in reply to Sanity)
Profile   Post #: 10
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/28/2009 5:25:55 AM   
hizgeorgiapeach


Posts: 1672
Status: offline
I've been up in that area, during the mid 90s, to go camping.  It's Incredibly beautiful, and I wish I could get up to that area to do some camping again.  The views are positively Stunning.

_____________________________

Rhi
Light travels faster than sound, which is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
Essential Scentsations

(in reply to Louve00)
Profile   Post #: 11
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/28/2009 8:20:41 AM   
Sanity


Posts: 22039
Joined: 6/14/2006
From: Nampa, Idaho USA
Status: offline

Yes, I'm sitting on the edge of a fresh (2000 year-old) volcanic cinder cone in that shot. Cinder is like pumice, its full of holes and it crumbles under foot as you walk on it. Astronauts trained in that area before the moon missions in the 1960's...

The color of the cinder there is almost a blood red.


quote:

ORIGINAL: Louve00

Damn you live in pretty country, Sanity.  That picture of St Helen is amazing.  In Craters of the Moon, are you sitting on lava, too?  (looks like brown grass in the picture lol).  But its truly gorgeous.  Thanks!!



< Message edited by Sanity -- 10/28/2009 8:21:11 AM >


_____________________________

Inside Every Liberal Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out

(in reply to Louve00)
Profile   Post #: 12
RE: Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under ... - 10/28/2009 8:59:53 AM   
AnimusRex


Posts: 2165
Joined: 5/13/2006
Status: offline
I love the PNW because of scenery like that.

Dunno about the magma pool, but I have seen a few shows on Nat Geographic and Discovery that talk about the very good possibility of an eruption of Ranier, and the Biblical chaos and destruction it would rain down on Tacoma/ Seattle environs.

St. Helens is what caused geologists to abandon the old classification system of "active", "dormant" and "extinct". Now volcanoes are either "active" or "dormant".

(in reply to Sanity)
Profile   Post #: 13
Page:   [1]
All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid >> Controversial study suggests vast magma pool under Washington state Page: [1]
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.174