. Earth Science News .




.
SHAKE AND BLOW
Waiting for Death Valley's Big Bang
by Staff Writers
New York NY (SPX) Jan 25, 2012

Death Valley's half-mile-wide Ubehebe Crater turns out to have been created 800 years ago - far more recently than generally thought. Credit: Brent Goehring/Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

In California's Death Valley, death is looking just a bit closer. Geologists have determined that the half-mile-wide Ubehebe Crater, formed by a prehistoric volcanic explosion, was created far more recently than previously thought-and that conditions for a sequel may exist today.

Up to now, geologists were vague on the age of the 600-foot deep crater, which formed when a rising plume of magma hit a pocket of underground water, creating an explosion. The most common estimate was about 6,000 years, based partly on Native American artifacts found under debris.

Now, a team based at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory has used isotopes in rocks blown out of the crater to show that it formed just 800 years ago, around the year 1200.

That geologic youth means it probably still has some vigor; moreover, the scientists think there is still enough groundwater and magma around for another eventual reaction. The study appears in the current issue of the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Ubehebe (YOU-bee-HEE-bee) is the largest of a dozen such craters, or maars, clustered over about 3 square kilometers of Death Valley National Park.

The violent mixing of magma and water, resulting in a so-called phreatomagmatic explosion, blew a hole in the overlying sedimentary rock, sending out superheated steam, volcanic ash and deadly gases such as sulfur dioxide.

Study coauthor Brent Goehring, (now at Purdue University) says this would have created an atom-bomb-like mushroom cloud that collapsed on itself in a donut shape, then rushed outward along the ground at some 200 miles an hour, while rocks hailed down. Any creature within two miles or more would be fatally thrown, suffocated, burned and bombarded, though not necessarily in that order.

"It would be fun to witness-but I'd want to be 10 miles away," said Goehring of the explosion.

The team began its work after Goehring and Lamont-Doherty professor Nicholas Christie-Blick led students on a field trip to Death Valley.

Noting that Ubehebe remained poorly studied, they got permission from the park to gather some 3- to 6-inch fragments of sandstone and quartzite, part of the sedimentary conglomerate rock that the explosion had torn out.

In the lab, Goehring and Lamont-Doherty geochemist Joerg Schaefer applied recent advances in the analysis of beryllium isotopes, which change their weight when exposed to cosmic rays.

The isotopes change at a predictable rate when exposed to the rays, so they could pinpoint when the stones were unearthed. An intern at Lamont-Doherty, Columbia College undergraduate Peri Sasnett, took a leading role in the analysis, and ended up as first author on the paper.

The dates clustered from 2,100 to 800 years ago; the scientists interpreted this as signaling a series of smaller explosions, culminating in the big one that created the main crater around 1200.

A few other dates went back 3,000 to 5,000 years; these are thought to have come from earlier explosions at smaller nearby maars. Christie-Blick said the dates make it likely that magma is still lurking somewhere below.

He pointed out that recent geophysical studies by other researchers have spotted what look like magma bodies under other parts of Death Valley.

"Additional small bodies may exist in the region, even if they are sufficiently small not to show up geophysically," he said. He added that the dates give a rough idea of eruption frequency: about every thousand years or less, which puts the current day within the realm of possibility. "There is no basis for thinking that Ubehebe is done," he said.

Hydrological data points the same way. Phreatomagmatic explosions are thought to take place mainly in wet places, which would seem to exclude Death Valley--the hottest, driest place on the continent.

Yet, as the researchers point out, Lamont-Doherty tree-ring researchers have already shown that the region was even hotter and drier during Medieval times, when the blowup took place. If there was sufficient water then, there is certainly enough now, they say.

Observations of springs and modeling of groundwater levels suggests the modern water table starts about 500 feet below the crater floor. The researchers' calculations suggest that it would take a spherical magma chamber as small as 300 feet across and an even smaller pocket of water to produce a Ubehebe-size incident.

Park officials are taking the study in stride. "We've typically viewed Ubehebe as a static feature, but of course we're aware it could come back," said geologist Stephanie Kyriazis, a park education specialist. "This certainly adds another dimension to what we tell the public." (About a million people visit the park each year.)

The scientists note that any reactivation of the crater would almost certainly be presaged by warning signs such as shallow earthquakes and opening of steam vents; this could go on for years before anything bigger happened.

For perspective, Yellowstone National Park, further east, is loaded with explosion craters made by related processes, plus the world's largest concentration of volcanically driven hot springs, geysers and fumaroles. The U.S. Geological Survey expects an explosion big enough to create a 300-foot-wide crater in Yellowstone about every 200 years; there have already been at least 20 smaller blowouts in the past 130 years. Visitors sometimes are boiled alive in springs, but no one has yet been blown up.

Death Valley's own fatal dangers are mainly non-geological: single-vehicle car accidents, heat exhaustion and flash floods. Rock falls, rattlesnakes and scorpions provide extra hazards, said Kyriazis. The crater is not currently on the list. "Right now, we're not planning to issue an orange alert or anything like that," she said.

The paper, "Do Phreatomagmatic Eruptions at Ubehebe Crater (Death Valley California) Relate to a Wetter Than Present Hydro-Climate?" is available from the authors, or The Earth Institute.

Related Links
The Earth Institute at Columbia University
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



SHAKE AND BLOW
Setting off a supervolcano
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 23, 2012
So far, most of what scientists know about supervolcanoes comes from studying the aftermaths of eruptions in places like Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming or Lake Toba in Indonesia. "Most places we can only hope to reconstruct what happened after an eruption. At Uturuncu, we can observe in real time how the volcano is evolving," says Noah Finnegan, a geomorphologist at the University of ... read more


SHAKE AND BLOW
Disaster Communications Terminals Deployed In South Sudan

TEPCO uses camera to survey Fukushima reactor

Disasters cost $366 billion in 2011: UN

Simulating firefighting operations on a PC

SHAKE AND BLOW
Dutch court rules in Apple/Samsung fight

Netflix gains subscribers, shares surge

iPhone sales drive record quarter for Apple

Metadynamics technique offers insight into mineral growth and dissolution

SHAKE AND BLOW
Broadcast study of ocean acidification to date helps scientists evaluate effects on marine life

Great Barrier Reef hopes on ice in Aussie Outback

Rich Asians threaten high-value fish: experts

Sri Lanka denies attack on fishermen

SHAKE AND BLOW
Norway wants to block China from Arctic Council: report

Satellites detect abundance of fresh water in the Arctic

Alaskan farewell to Russian tanker after fuel run

Russian ship leaves after ice-bound Alaska fuel run

SHAKE AND BLOW
Davos grapples with surging demand for fuel, food

Farming is key to meeting environmental challenge: FAO chief

Sweeten up your profits with the right hybrid

'Rules' may govern genome evolution in young plant species

SHAKE AND BLOW
Waiting for Death Valley's Big Bang

Thousands evacuated in flooded Australia

New floods hit northeastern Australia

Italy's ex-safety chief faces homicide probe over quake

SHAKE AND BLOW
US Navy SEALs prove their mettle again

Former colonial soldiers in Mozambique hope for pensions

Nigeria police fire tear gas at Lagos protest

Ethiopia: Thousands driven out in land grab

SHAKE AND BLOW
The price of your soul: How the brain decides whether to 'sell out'

Penn Researchers Help Solve Questions About Ethiopians' High-Altitude Adaptations

Babies with three parents a possibility

Sitting pretty: bum's the word in Japan security


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement