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Posts: 1259 Join date: 2010-08-16
 | Subject: Yellowstone Supervolcano Getting Ready To Blow It's Cork? Thu Jul 14, 2011 9:10 pm | |
| Yellowstone Supervolcano Getting Ready To Blow It's Cork?Researchers report the super-volcano underneath the state of Wyoming has been rising at a record rate since 2004. Its floor has gone up three inches per year for the last three years indicating the fastest rate since records began in 1923 A 10,000 YEAR OLD GLACIER SUDDENLY MELTED - WHY? 6-30-10The most recent swarm started after the January 2010 Haiti earthquake. With 1620 small earthquakes between January 17, 2010 and February 1, 2010, this swarm was the second largest ever recorded in the Yellowstone Caldera. The largest of these shocks was a magnitude 3.8 on January 21, 2010 at 11:16 PM MST.[15][18] This swarm reached the background levels by 21st of February. 2010 2009 -over 500 Earthquakes at Yellowstone in the last week 18 earthquakes on January 2, 2009 12 earthquakes on January 1, 2009 58 earthquakes on December 31, 2008 23 Earthquakes on December 30, 2008 38 Earthquakes on December 29, 2008103 Earthquakes on December 28, 2008  Posted by geologist Christopher C. Sanders on January 1, 2009.
"I am advising all State officials around Yellowstone National Park for a potential State of Emergency. In the last week over 252 earthquakes have been observed by the USGS. We have a 3D view on the movement of magma rising underground. We have all of the pre warning signs of a major eruption from a super volcano. - I want everyone to leave Yellowstone National Park and for 200 miles around the volcano caldera." |
NEW YELLOWSTONE WEBCAMRECENT QUAKES IN YELLOWSTONEYELLOWSTONE CALDERA GROWING AGAINCOSMIC DUST CLOUD - INCOMING updated as reports come in THIS MAY BE IT!!!YOU'VE BEEN WARNED BEFORE!!!! ESA satellite reveals Yellowstone's deep secret Satellite images acquired by ESA's ERS-2 revealed the recently discovered changes in Yellowstone's caldera are the result of molten rock movement 15 kilometres below the Earth's surface, according to a recent study published in Nature.Using Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry, InSAR for short, Charles Wicks, Wayne Thatcher and other U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) scientists mapped the changes in the northern rim of the caldera, or crater, and discovered it had risen about 13 centimetres from 1997 to 2003.InSAR, a sophisticated version of 'spot the difference', involves mathematically combining different radar images, acquired from as near as possible to the same point in space at different times, to create digital elevation models and reveal otherwise undetectable changes occurring between image acquisitions."We know now how mobile and restless the Yellowstone caldera actually is. Ground-based measurements can be more efficiently deployed because of our work," Thatcher said. "The research could not have been done without satellite radar data." NOTE: THE VIDEOS BELOW ARE FICTIONAL- BASED ON FACTSYELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART I YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART II YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART III YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART IV YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART V YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART VI PART II OF THE FILMYELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART I YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART II YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART III YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART IV YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART V YELLOWSTONE SUPERVOLCANO - VIDEO - PART VI |
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