Molten plume of material beneath Yellowstone National Park cooler than expected
August 28th, 2008 - 12:26 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, August 28 (ANI): Geologists have found that the molten plumes of material beneath the Yellowstone National Park in the US are cooler than expected.
The geysers of Yellowstone National Park owe their existence to the Yellowstone hotspot - a region of molten rock buried deep beneath the region.
But, to find out what is causing the hotspot, Derek Schutt of Colorado State University and Ken Dueker of the University of Wyoming took its temperature.
Yellowstone is located atop of one of the few large volcanic hotspots on Earth, said Schutt. But, though the hot material is a volcanic plume, its cooler than others of its kind, such as one in Hawaii, he added.
When a supervolcano last erupted at this spot more than 600,000 years ago, its plume covered half of todays United States with volcanic ash.
Details of the cause of the Yellowstone supervolcanos periodic eruptions through history are still unknown.
Thanks to new seismometers in the Yellowstone area, however, scientists are obtaining new data on the hotspot.
Past research found that in rocks far beneath southern Idaho and northwestern Wyoming, seismic energy from distant earthquakes slows down considerably.
Using the recently deployed seismometers, Schutt and Dueker modeled the effects of temperature and other processes that affect the speed at which seismic energy travels. They then used these models to make an estimate of the Yellowstone hotspots temperature.
They found that the hotspot is only 50 to 200 degrees Celsius hotter than its surroundings.
Although Yellowstone sits above a plume of hot material coming up from deep with the Earth, its a remarkably lukewarm plume, said Schutt, comparing Yellowstone to other plumes.
Although the Yellowstone volcanos continued existence is likely due to the upwelling of this hot plume, the plume may have become disconnected from its heat source in Earths core.
Disconnected, however, does not mean extinct, said Schutt. It would be a mistake to write off Yellowstone as a dead volcano. A hot plume, even a slightly cooler one, is still hot, he added. (ANI)
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Tags: colorado state university, distant earthquakes, ken dueker, northwestern wyoming, seismic energy, seismometers, university of wyoming, volcanic ash, volcanic plume, yellowstone hotspot