Volcanologist Answers Volcano Questions From Twitter Tech Support WIRED

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I'm volcanologist Jenny Barkley this is volcano [Music] support at Serene B Russell not going to lie the most jarring part about being in Italy was casually being told what looked like a normal Mountain super close to where we had been staying was Mount vvus and that it was still active excuse me she's absolutely right it is still an active volcano and in fact last time Mount vvus erupted was in 1944 and like many volcanoes we tend to hear about them in the news when there's lots of activity going on they have a huge impact but at any one time around the world we manage to live quite happily with about 40 to 50 volcanoes erupting anywhere on the earth it is true that for Naples M vvus having another eruption would be a big deal sometimes it has a really large eruption like it did famously burying pompe and herculanum sometimes it has an eruption like it did in 1944 where it generated a relatively more quiet lava flow and a few smaller explosions and M vvus is capable of generating both of those types of eruptions okay this question is from JZ Siana God just be making pointless ass why the do volcanoes exist volcanoes do seem a bit destructive but actually over geological time volcanoes first formed and what what they did is they transported a lot of really useful things like water and oxygen from the interior of the Earth to the outside of the a so to be honest without volcanoes on the a we wouldn't be here either at L Capri says there's a volcano in Indonesia that spews blue lava I mean what sorcery is this blue is not really a color that you'd associate with volcanoes it's red but the blue is a really special condition for that particular particular volcano it's really full of sulfur and when that sulfur erupts as the lava is coming out it's not the lava itself that's blue but it's the gas that's associated with it and it creates this ethereal blue flame that really does look pretty spooky over the top of it so the next question is from at one air Bruff 18 why are iseland volcanoes so active so Iceland is an island sticking out in the Atlant attic ocean and Iceland is there just like Hawaii because of the huge amounts of volcanic activity over time and that volcanic activity has meant that that has built up from really deep in the seaf Flor and now sticks above the ground and unlike Hawaii Iceland is also located on a rift so where the plates are moving apart like that so what that means is there's two different mechanisms that help to generate that magma and every now and then that magma has to make make its way to the surface and that's why their volcanoes are so active so this question is from at Mora vagin L what do volcanologists even really do except sit around talking about how badass volcanoes are what else is there to be studied they're volcanos slightly rude what I spend a lot of my time doing is I like to look at rocks they're the secret recorders of some of the things that have happened to the magma before it erupted and it unlocks lots of Clues about how volcanoes are going to erupt this is basically Frozen magma and by examining this we can understand what sorts of things were in the magma that caused it to erupt volcanic rocks are also erupted with crystals in them you can maybe just about see the crystals now in this magma here and believe it or not crystals grow with very specific composition that we can use to unravel the pressures temperatures and the changes that happened that caused that magma to go from being nice gentle magma sitting around quietly underneath the Earth surface to something that erupts and causes destructive Mayhem that we associate with volcanoes one of the really big challenges we've got as volcanologists is the warnings for us are understanding when that magma underneath the surface is on the move and these are my modern measuring devices if you imagine and what we can do now is Imagine in the subsurface we've got these areas where magma might come through now as the magma pushes up here you can see it's starting to push and go where it otherwise wouldn't have been so it creates all sorts of tension in the Rocks around there which create little waves that we can pick up with our Splendid detecting devices and we can tell how those waves have been generated and what's going on with that and the other thing that happens is as the magma starts to push up it actually makes our little volcano start to deform and it will change its position which would mean that also what we can measure from well here's my funky satellite here what we can measure by satellite is changes in the surface of the Earth the next question is from brot 747 my question is what's your favorite volcano mine would be M and Helens my favorite volcanoes are all called Suri a I've done huge amounts of field research in the Eastern Caribbean the little Islands there are like of volcanoes many of them have the name sufr in their title so I love sufr St Vincent on St Vincent and sufr Hills volcano which is on monserat when these volcanoes erupt what they do is they produce spectacular explosions and sometimes they erupt slowly and gently not the red hot lava flows that you might expect but build up of Dome material at the top of the volcano however when those collapse back down they generate deadly pyroclassic itic density currents mixtures of red hot ash and gas and they come flying down the hillsides at speeds that are much greater that certainly than you can run from and almost definitely that you could drive from and these are something that are lethal for anyone who's in their way at Han i7 how are people standing so relaxed near Four live volcanoes in Iceland volcano tourism so unreal volcano tourism isn't a new thing but if you remember the idea of the grand and tour of Europe and one of the things that many tourists would do 200 years ago is they would go and visit the amazing volcanoes of Italy including stromi and Etna which are frequently erupting and of course the amazing spectacle of vvus and Pompei near Naples and one of the things that they can do that's really frightening is they can erupt explosively and suddenly and this can and does catch people unaware make sure you follow really closely a official advice about that volcano at Katy Nicholson 1 is wondering where is the biggest volcano Define big so if by big you mean the tallest one of the tallest volcanoes are actually monola and monia in Hawaii the remarkable thing about them is they've got about four or 5,000 MERS worth of height below sea level they've had to build all that way up from the sea floor and then they've got another 4,000 M on the top so once you count that level of building they're taller even than Mount Everest technically the tallest volcano in terms of height above sea level they tend to be in the high Andes which is of course a very high mountain range and they're over six and a half th000 MERS and the big tallest volcano in the world in that sense is Nevada do oos del Salado another way of measuring how big a volcano is is how big the eruptions that it produces so of course course there are the super volcanoes none of which have erupted in living memory but historically the largest volcanic eruption was Mount Tambora in Indonesia which erupted in 1815 and that created noises that were heard in Australia at Taylor mCP says forgive me he's forgiven but what makes a volcano a super volcano is it when multiple volcano eruptions combine like a perforated ulcer so strictly what makes a volcano a super volcano is when it has a super eruption and your imagery of a perforated ulcer is kind of a little bit right in terms of all sorts of magma coalescing and coming together to create a huge volume of material that would be erupted out all at once and a super eruption is when you have a th000 cubic kilometers of material erupted all at once from the interior of the earth outside and luckily that's something that really doesn't happen very often at eron's Wonderland is wondering why do volcanoes have different shapes and what plate boundaries do you find at each someone help Google ain't helping Strat volcanoes tend to have much steeper slopes that kind of classic volcano shape that we think of where shield volcanoes tend to have much lower angle slopes in different types of plate boundaries there is a tendency for particular types of magma to be generated so in the subduction zones where we've got one plate going underneath the other big explosive eruptions create lots of material and so they pile up quite quickly creating what we think of as the classic volcano shape and in areas where you've got more gentle flows you'll have more shield volcanoes at Abby Smith wants to know what has been the longest continuous eruption stromy for example an island off the coast of Italy has been erupting for thousands of years it has little explosions even the Romans used to refer to Stromboli as the Lighthouse of uh the Mediterranean and it's had a few pauses that mean it's not the one that's thought of as continuous but the volcano that we know that's been going the most continuously is Santiago volcano in Guatemala which has been erupting continually since 1902 at a wasted hour is wondering what country has the most volcanoes active and extinct the United States of America which has got uh many volcanoes in many different states along the west coast but in fact I would say the country with the most active volcanoes so where for example there are seven volcanoes erupting right now is Indonesia and that's definitely the country that's had the most volcanoes that have erupted since for example 1950 so at blah wonders super volcano overdue for an eruption could Wipe Out the whole us what I think what you're worrying about is perhaps the super volcano that you find in the US Yellowstone its super volcanic eruptions are about 300,000 years apart and to be honest super volcanos don't always have super volcanic eruptions and what Yellowstone most often does is it has much smaller eruptions super volcanic eruptions so ones with those huge volumes of material happen really really infrequently we're talking many many thousands of human lifetimes apart so at Jedi Master Roman trying to wrap my head around how volcanoes can cause tsunamis is wild you're right in the case of volcanoes when they erupt a huge amount of material that all comes back down into the sea at once that creates the displacement that can generate a tsunami but the other thing is that volcanoes build themselves up chaotically and from time to time they can completely collapse so if a volcano collapses down into the sea then it can generate a tsunami as well so most recently uh there was an eruption of anak katua and it had a big eruption that generated a tsunami and that inundated many of the villages nearby at Red eron is wondering what's the dark glassy volcanic rock called it's called obsidian it's absolutely fantastic if anyone plays Minecraft you might have seen this this is real obsidian and this is actually from the island of liery off the coast of Italy and what this is is this is volcanic rock that was magma where the Melt has quenched so quickly it hasn't made any crystals but actually turned itself into glass and if you took a tiny little Shard off this you would almost be able to see through it it's also very very sharp it was used by many cultures as a cutting Implement so for example Native Americans in South America the myi in New Zealand pretty much anywhere where they could access this really special type of volcanic rock so at proo asks weather dummy here how do volcanoes cause lightning so volcanoes cause lightning separate to the kind of lightning phenomena that we see in the atmosphere because when we have an explosive eruption huge amounts of Ash is thrown out into the atmosphere and that's actually electrostatically charged and so the differences in charge cross the plume that's generated by that explosion expion create lightning AC quiet backat people is wondering why do volcanoes become inactive and that's an easy answer volcanoes become inactive when it runs out of magma that can get up to the surface we either think of volcanoes as potentially active active which means in the process of erupting or extinct so dormant I think really means when you think it could erupt again but it might not and we tend to refer to those as potentially active volcano and around the world on land there are about 1,400 of these volcanoes at Cassie has got a really interesting question questions from 5-year-olds what would happen if I fell into a volcano so if you fell into the crater of an active volcano and say for example it had a hot lava flow in the crater that lava flows at about 1200° Centigrade so super super hot so certainly a temperature at which it would be very difficult to survive for very long at all this is an interesting question from at McKenzie Turman if volcanoes create new land how did the first volcano come about almost philosophical actually magma was first believe it or not when the Earth was first formed it was a giant ball of magma and actually it was as that started to cool down slightly that land was able to be formed so the volcanoes were absolutely definitely first but the planet was one giant ball of magma and it wasn't until it created the land that the volcanoes had to start pushing out through that land and forming at silver dreams I just thought of something if sea levels can rise and unders sea volcanoes erupt to create new land masses does that mean Earth is gradually becoming a bigger sphere over time can you answer this well silver dreams that's a really good thought so if we're thinking about things erupting moving apart like this then you would think that over time the Earth would be getting bigger but actually because of plate tectonics these plates are growing and moving like this creating new land mass but at the same time at the other end there's plates that are going down underneath one another and destroying them and both these areas are where volcanoes can be created but they're what it means that over time the Earth has remained the same size the next question is from at Ira cook how does volcanic ash from South America stop flights to Melbourne pretty amazing stuff I'm hoping my flight makes it so perhaps you will all remember when flights were stopped in 2010 from a yal yako and that was a really unfortunate circumstance of atmospheric circulation that was pushing Ash towards Europe so they had to close European airspace and that's of course because there's all sorts of different types of atmosphere circulating and once volcanic eruptions are sufficiently big that they inject material up into the upper atmosphere or the stratosphere that Ash and those particles get traveled all around and guess what Aeroplane engines do not like those particles they operate at temperatures that will turn that volcanic ash back into if you like magma stick to the propellers which is really not a situation that you want if you want them to keep going round so for that reason when there's volcanic ash in the atmosphere airplanes will avoid it so at chaos and JD do volcanoes communicate with one another so it's not like in the Disney film lava where the volcanoes sing nice little songs to one another as they grow and fall back into the sea but it is possible that when magmatic systems are close together so the volcanoes at the surface are close together they're feeder systems as there's things moving around in one system the resonance and the pushies and the shoves in the ground get transmitted to another so it's not that they'll erupt all one after another but it's possible that some of those stresses and strains that we see in the subsurface do travel from one system to another so at Jess Phoenix 2018 is wondering have you heard any of the volcanic infrasound recordings my colleague Jeff Johnson at boy State records the sound volcanoes make below the range of human hearing it's captivating yes I have heard those infrasound recordings and they are captivating so when volcanoes erupt they cause all sorts of displacement M ments and movements in the atmosphere and in the rocks that surround them as the magma is moving up and these generate waves and the infrasound waves when you change their frequency can be turned into sound waves that give an amazing record of some of these processes that are taking place it's well worth checking out at Matthew CR has the question when it comes to geological terms what is the ring of fire where is it in terms of plate boundaries so here we go this is a map of the Earth and these white dots show the plate boundaries of the earth and you can see marked really clearly around the Pacific Ocean here we have this big run of plate boundaries and they all happen to be the plate boundaries where one plate is going down underneath another that generates quite a lot of explosive volcanism hence the name Ring of Fire because there's lots of volcanoes all around this plate boundary and it surrounds the Pacific Okay so at J Humphrey ever wonder why some volcanoes like Ms and Helens erupt explosively While others like kilaa oo lava one of the things that's really amazing about volcanoes around the world is there's all sorts of different types of magma and these different types of magma lose and grow gas within them in different ways so for example this is a magma that's a little bit more like what you might see in Kila and you can see it's got these great big bubble holes and that's because the gas can move around quite freely in the magma but other types of magma are kind of quite resistant to that and they create lots and lots of tiny little bubbles which creates huge pressures that mean when the volcano finally explodes there's a huge release of that pressure generating very large explosive eruptions and those large explosive eruptions generate something like this which pmus which is super light and the reason it's super light is because it's absolutely full of holes which are a record of that gas trying really hard to get out being resisted by that type of magma I'm going to put this into the beaker and it's going to float and it's floating because it's super light because it's largely composed of bubbles with just tiny little filaments of volcanic glass okay so at e Batterson is wondering where do volcanoes get the magma SL lava now lots of people think there's a huge sea of magma just below the crust that's not true there's not magma everywhere it's particular conditions that are created to generate that magma and I'm going to show you this for a subduction zone so here's one plate it's diving down here's another plate here crashing into it okay now what happens is as that plate goes down it gets heated up and squeezed and it gives off fluids and those fluids create the special conditions where melt can be generated now that melt has got liquid in it so liquid rock if you like but it's also got gas and it's hot and what that means is that melt has a tendency to rise and as it rises up towards the surface it will come out and then eventually what we have is our volcano I've been loving your questions from the internet this has been volcano support signing off [Music]

2024-09-29

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