Scientists Map Yellowstone Magma Plume

December 12, 2009 RSS Feed Print

JACKSON, Wyo.—Information from a vast seismograph network confirms a magma plume extends at least 500 miles below Yellowstone National Park, scientists say.

The scientists from Utah, Massachusetts, Michigan, Norway, Taiwan and Switzerland used a network of 150 seismographs over an area 435 miles long and 310 miles wide to record seismic waves from earthquakes around the world to make a three-dimensional image of the plume.

They published their findings last month in the Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research.

"I think for the first time it all fits together," said Robert Smith, professor of geophysics with the University of Utah Department of Geology and Geophysics, and coordinating scientist with Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. "This is integration of various kinds of data" from several different fields of science.

He said the bottom of the magma plume is unclear, though instruments show it extends at least 500 miles below the Earth's surface.

"It wouldn't surprise me that it would go deeper," he said.

Smith said the Earth's mantle, the layer below the crust, is flowing from the northwest to the southeast and deforming the magma plume. Meanwhile, he said, the North American tectonic plate is sliding to the southwest.

"This hot, melted material is coming up (at an angle)," Smith said. "It would normally rise vertically."

He said the new image of the magma plume gives researchers a better understanding of what happened in the past and what could happen in the future.

"Yellowstone has affected five or six states in the western United States over the last 17 million years," Smith said. "Yellowstone's had a profound affect on the topography and the drainage and the mountain ranges for millions of years."

Earlier this year Smith reported that an earthquake swarm of more than 800 earthquakes was the most intense swarm recorded in Yellowstone since a swarm that rattled the West Yellowstone area in 1985.

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Information from: Jackson Hole News And Guide, http://www.jhnewsandguide.com

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hard to believe; where is a source for this data, Mr. Delano?

Ronald of FL 8:25PM December 20, 2009

The Yellowstone magma chamber , that blob of semi-plastic rock that fills the chamber is cooler then temperature in my Jotul wood stove. The scientist measured the temperature in the magma chamber by some fancy calculations and found the highest reading was only 400 degrees Farenheidt or 200 degrees celcius.

We need 2,200 degrees farenheidt to melt rock and since the rotating inner core is spreading the heat of the earths core there will not be any mor heat applied to this chamber.

This is excellent news. We do not have to worry about Yellowstone "popping it's cork" any time soon, so we can tell oour teenagers to stop watching the show, "It could happen tomarrow".

John Delano of NY 8:10AM December 16, 2009

In Plate Tectonics you need thin plate layers moving around and subducting, and a thick plate as referenced in the authors work as 500 miles deep is impossible to work with.The 17 mile Mo-ho or change in density of rock can not be ignored as it is in the "thick Plate" explanation of the old trailing magma chambers trailing off to the northwest.

The trailing plume is as simple as a child pushing over his wet sand castle wall leaving behind the remnents of where it was.

The mountain building era from 16 million years ago to 10 million years ago in the the Rockey mountains is a time when the mountains were being pushed from the west coast towards Colorado. The "push" came from a massive ice shell flow that remained in the Pacific Ocean and it rode inland forcing up the land like a giant buldower.The area of 3 states wasvpushed up on top of the state of Colorado to form the Colorado Plateau and the front range of Wyoming marks the final move.

The north pole was 1600 miles southeast of where it is today on the 90 degree East Longitude Line. The Equator was north of Hawaii

and the crust was still sliding 6 inches per year as the ice mass melted.

Its a simple answer, and you must believe before you can see.

John Delano of NY 8:44AM December 15, 2009

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