This Week in Volcano News; Garibaldi Lake Volcano Update, Ruapehu Heating Cycle Begins
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- čas přidán 5. 08. 2024
- In the last 8 days, what appeared to be gas rising from the ground was spotted at Canada's Garibaldi Lake volcanic field. Meanwhile, in New Zealand, the Ruapehu volcano's highly acidic crater lake began a new heating cycle. And, on the border of Nevada and Oregon, what was reported to be the world's largest lithium deposit was claimed to have been found in the caldera of a long extinct volcano. This video will discuss these stories and list the 45 volcanoes which are actively erupting around the planet.
Thumbnail Photo Credit: Tytgat, G. C., Alaska Volcano Observatory / University of Alaska Fairbanks, Geophysical Institute, avo.alaska.edu/images/image.p.... This image was then overlaid with text, and then overlaid with GeologyHub made graphics (the image border & the GeologyHub logo).
Note: This video's thumbnail image does not display a volcano in Canada, a volcano mentioned in this video, or even a currently erupting volcano, but rather an eruption of the Augustine volcano in Alaska which occurred on March 6th, 2006.
A special thanks to the Extreme Pursuit CZcams channel for granting me permission to use clips of his footage!
Video Sources from the Extreme Pursuit CZcams channel:
[1] • Incredible eruptions a...
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Sources/Citations:
[1] Robert C. Greene, "Volcanic rocks of the McDermitt Caldera, Nevada-Oregon", U.S. Geological Survey, Open-File Report 76-753, doi.org/10.3133/ofr76753
[2] Source of Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) methodology and criteria: Newhall, C. G., and Self, S. (1982), The volcanic explosivity index (VEI) an estimate of explosive magnitude for historical volcanism, J. Geophys. Res., 87(C2), 1231-1238, doi:10.1029/JC087iC02p01231. Accessed / Read by / geologyhub on Oct 5th, 2022.
[3] Servicio Geologico Minero Argentino (Argentina)
[4] ONEMI (Chile)
[5] INGV (Italy)
[6] Tonga Geological Services
[7] PVMBG (Indonesia)
[8] Vedur.is / Iceland Met Office
[9] Phivolcs (Philippines)
[10] U.S. Geological Survey
[11] Hawaiian Volcano Observatory
[12] Alaska Volcano Observatory
[13] Vanuatu Meteorology & Geo-Hazards Department
[14] INSTITUTO GEOFÍSICO ESCUELA POLITÉCNICA NACIONAL (Ecuador)
[15] OVSICORI-UNA (Costa Rica)
[16] Sernageomin (Chile)
[17] Geonet (New Zealand), Information on the site is largely (but not all content on the site falls under the CC BY 3.0 NZ license) licensed under a CC BY 3.0 NZ license
[18] Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Russia)
[19] Japanese Meteorological Agency
[20] Servicio Geologico Colombiano
[21] Rabaul Volcano Observatory
[22] Observatoire Volcanologique de Piton de la Fournaise (OVPF) (Réunion Island)
[23] Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys
[24] University of Alaska Fairbanks, Geophysical Institute
[25] Source of Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) methodology and
[26] VEIs, dates/years, composition, tephra layer name, DRE estimates, and bulk tephra volume estimates for volcanic eruptions shown in this video which were assigned a VEI 4 or larger are sourced from the LaMEVE database (British Geological Survey © UKRI), www2.bgs.ac.uk/vogripa/view/c..., Used with Permission
[27] Vanuatu Meteorology and Geo-hazards Department
0:00 Ibu Volcano Erupts
0:33 This Week's Top Stories
0:56 Garibaldi Lake
2:25 Ruapehu Update
3:39 Reported Lithium Discovery
4:30 List of Erupting Volcanoes
I believe that you are the only source that has mentioned that the McDermott crater was part of the Yellowstone super volcano's previous eruptions. Thank you for that!
Thanks for the update on the volcano in British Columbia, Canada 🇨🇦.
High Five!
🇺🇸🙏🇨🇦
Could you please talk about the forgotten volcanoes of Mexico? The place is called CVA (Chiapanecan Volcanic Arc) with its only active volcano discovered so far, Chichonal (Chichon). The CVA has more unstudied volcanoes that are considered mountains by the population.
What's a mexico?
Sorry i forgot about them.
Interesting development of the fumarole situation. It was worth investigating.
I just can't make sense of what clearly looks like some sort of gas or vapor being small pebbles and small stones swept up in the wind
@@krakheddremonds me of a similar event on i believe mt saint helens little while ago? Looked very much like funlmerol but ended up being "just a rock slide" or soemthing. Maybe a year ago now or so? Rhe fact thay with this one, it occurs rigjt above that yellow patch just in itself seems.... at bare minimum crazy coincidental... astronomically maybe lol wonder how common yellow patches like that actually are in this samensettinf elsewhere around the volcano... if not very common , well .. geologyhub will likely have to go with the "official" explanation regardless due to his credibikity , its not like he can go there himself ... as it stands theres a single observation saying fumerole and the official observation with an indepth but entirely plausible explanation/possible explanation and nothijg else. Will be interesting to see if there are any tremors soon in this area . You have to check Canada earthquakes separate, i know of no earthquake teacker that includes all including smaller ones. Its an issue of mine , because while not incredibly active, cansda has a ton more eqd regularly than i ever realized. So now i check them separately/specifically. Looking at NAmerica or especially the "U.S" areas earthquakes and NOT also including canadas seems craxy to me when you think about it. Geology doesnt care abiut our manmade borders 🤷
@@krakhedd Yeah I don't buy that it's the bernoulli effect.
@@adamdude I could see a few particles, maybe even enough to look "dusty", but absolutely not this. There seem to be missing pieces of this puzzle
@@krakheddI agree 👍💯
That's very interesting as I was on Ruapehu just one day ago and heard muffled cracking noises coming from what sounded like the summit of the mountain. At the time I thought it was just the snow and ice heating up and melting from the sun but now I wonder if it could have been related to the crater lake heating up or magma movement.
Eruption isnt the only hazard, increased crater lake temps can cause lahars. Take care, stay safe, avoid the lahar zones!
Huh..
Oh. A huge Lithium deposit.
Yep. These days that would perk up a few ears.
0:33 oh wow that is quite the interesting shot
Informative and interesting , thank you
McDermitt also had cinnabar mines. My father worked underground in one back in the late '60's
Wow! The video of that Volcano erupting in the beginning looked super awesome, it looked like explosives being detonated from underground
indeed.
0:07 and 0:13 looked more like industrial rock blasting. I didn't know there were eruptions like this.
yes agreed. then i was thinking like he said, oh, if it is an ongoing eruption regularly for twenty years, there would be a ton of loose material up there, contributing to its appearance of an industrial rock quarry blast
Thanks for the weekly update. Nice to keep up with the earth.
So disappointing about Black Tusk, but we can hope that Mt. Baker will give us a little show. It hasn't actively steamed for quite a few years now.
That's cool that they sent a helicopter for closer examination. It would be neat to see close up photos of the chimney that was funneling the winds.
thanks for all the hard work in coordinating this information
Thank you for the vids
Thanks as always. The videos of the Ibu volcano are very interesting! Similarly, Geoff Mackley's videos of Mount Ruapehu erupting are fascinating and terrifying.
Yellowstone has had a really interesting history. Some of its eruptions were very intense and large, like those of Toba, La Pacana and Taupo!
100% Geoff Mackley! His content is legendary.
@@sixthsenseamelia4695 True.
i second the black tusk false alarm, it always has rocks crumbling off of it, its a shale like structure. i was there a couple weeks ago. i wish it were true
live in Victoria,Canada never knew we had nasty volcanoes here & Im 70. learn something new every day.
I love the Google Earth shots of the Yellowstone caldera with all the round and square farm fields on both sides of it and barren land in between them. What are those people growing, I assume it is some common crops like corn, it looks interesting from above though, the different squares and circles are different shades of green. I hope they go hiking in those mountains by their farms. Does anyone watching this actually live on one of those farms? What's it like to live on a farm on the border of Yellowstone's largest caldera?
Ruapehu is quite close to Mount Tarawera - you should tell the amazing story one day of its "violent volcanic eruption in the early hours of 10 June 1886 ... the eruption reached an estimated volcanic explosivity index (VEI) of 5 and killed an estimated 120 people, making it the largest and deadliest in New Zealand during the past 500 years..." It destroyed the sublimely beautiful pink terraces that were just starting to attract many European tourists.
i love your vids
And now Kilauea is spewing lava like crazy!
thank you
The Ibu eruption is so interesting. Looks like flat ground, then boom!
I would love to know about the Kilwinning NorthAyrshire and Irvine Geological info if possible xxxx
In my own online investigation of the area I discovered that there is a hot springs on the upper Pitt River, north of Pitt Lake. Since the volcanoes in that area are the supposed closest source of heat for a a hot springs I assume the hot springs does say something about it not being extinct.
Mount ruapahu is an active volcano, it's a warm winter here. Spring has started already.
Could you do a video on the Southern Washington Cascades Conductor (SWCC). It being within the Goats mountain and Rainier range. I found it very peculiar and difficult to understand.
I would love to understand more about the Crater of Diamonds in Arkansas. I'm assuming it has some interesting geological history and would love your take on it! Thanks
has been covered czcams.com/video/kM4LyDxk6G8/video.html
Can you do a video on Mount Meager ? It is 94 km north of Garibaldi. Canadian Geographic posted an update on meager in August 2023 summering the 2022 exploration of Mount Meager
I am trying to understand why there is no other evidence of a wind? Strong winds will also affect the entire hillside, not as pronounced perhaps but there would be some evidence of the wind. Bernoulli effect... how - this is isolated to one tiny outcrop - there are similar near, and in view of the video. No Bernoulli effect there?
Heads up! Kilauea just went off!
Doesn't really look like rock dust from strong winds
I guess you are going to have to out there and investigate yourself!!
mmmmm indeed. I thought he was gonna say snow flurries or precipitation of some sort being flung upwards by the wind. That would make sense to me. If authorities are lying… well certainly, we shall allllllllllll know the answer if the fumerol does more fumoroling. Or if tremors start up with the dormancy becoming less dormant.
Didn't look like sand from wind. Also even active volcanos are not always smoking or spitting lava. I would keep an eye on it. Can never hurt
You might want to start adding 1 word to some statements: known.
"This is the largest lithium deposit" vs this is the largest known lithium deposit. We may find a larger deposit in the future.
We need someone to fly a drone up to that Canadian volcano.
At timestamp 0:12 looks a lot like a delayed detonation blast pattern at a quarry/ mine rather than an eruption, what gives? Good to know it was just dust in the wind at Garibaldi, but also a bit disappointing.
What prevents undersea volcanos from having multiple steam explosions?
Can you talk about the new eruption on Hawaii?
The High Rocks caldera complex is about as old as McDermitt. Maybe older, at 16.43Ma.
Thacker Pass has been explored for lithium since the aughts. 2007 or thereabouts. So the fact that there's lithium associated with that volcanism isn't exactly a new discovery. But what did happen recently, I think, is a large increase in the estimates.
I know another company, different from the one that's been studying Thacker Pass at the south end of the caldera, has been studying the northern end of the caldera in Oregon. I think that's where the new news is coming from and why it's being talked about again.
Kīlauea began a new eruption early this afternoon, Sunday, 10 September 2023.
How did we not know that we had that giant lithium deposit?
THEY hide and hoard all good things for THIER pleasure and evil greed.
Ive always been suspect on Canadas lack of active volcanoes. I mean, we have a huge country! Along the 'ring of fire'. I figure BC should have something going on somewhere!
I wouldn’t worry about Ruapahu until you see a couple of below average in height fellows appear to be trying to throw something away.
Well Kilauea just started to erupt
Ok, I think the USA is literally cheating in Civ at this point.
1. Best Spawn Location pre-Industrialization era
2. Used to be nerfed becausebof lack of Lithium, but suddenly had it?
Worlds largest Lithium deposit how,s that for a win!!
that very clearly isn’t dust coming from the black tusk.
Nirvana foretold of this discovery on the 1991 album Nevermind.
BREAKING: Kīlauea Caldera's Halema'uma'u crater eruption resumed.
If the fumerole at Girabaldi was a false alarm what caused the smoking?
As Tim said at 2:06 it was likely small particles of rock being blown up the side of the mountain by strong winds.
Sorry man, but I'm not convinced that it was just a strong wind that blows small particle of rocks.
I hope it is a false report. it would be very bad to assume that the magma chamber there is inactive if it is actually active.
11500 years are nothing in geologic time, Lipari has made a sleep of 40000years.
UsA getting richer…havent they have enough?
There's a thin upper class that has most of the wealth. Most of the people never see most of it.
So based on my feed it appears a new eruption at Kilauea's summit caldera has begun.
I had my doubts about that being a fumeral. It was the wrong colour. But still, it's still not a safe area to try and get to. Please, no one go out there until it's deemed safe for all of the reasons already given.
As a word of warning, the government no longer pays the bill for your search and rescue. You do. So if you're going to gamble with your life after you've been warned, you get what you deserve.
Can anyone guess who gets the Lithium mining & refining work? I buy some stocks to get rich & spend on meteorites
TRICK OR TREAT, SIR,
DEAR ALL THE PEOPLE OF OUR WHOLEWORLD IN NOWADAY, IF WE ALL THE WHOLEWORLD DO NOT NEEDED TO GET EXTINCTION ANYTIME WITHIN THIS YEAR, 2023, SIR.
I don't believe the garabaldie story.
DJT2024
i saw a post about the lithium on facebook. But I did not click through to read it. And the headline stated that the location was in Oregon. So, hmmmmm, I ought to click through and check, lol. I completely and solely and totally only clicked on the fb post in my feed to troll all the idiot environmentalist schlubs who want to say things like, leave it alone! don’t mine it! While simultaneously possessing zero knowledge about world economic lithium demand, and tacitly if possibly unknowingly touting all the cheap lithium we get from other countries because they allow egregious child labor and environmental abuses. Therefore I clicked on that post to troll all them and state that it would be much better to mine it in America, with our strict environmental laws and strict laws against slavery and child labor. So I have no idea, this guy says it’s yellowstone with the lithium and the fb post I saw said it was Oregon. I suppose we shall see! We need more lithium, and ALLLLLLLL of us comment here and anywhere on devices using electricity powered by lithium. So we need more of it to be mined. In an environmentally strict, slavery free, child labor free way.
Now lets talk about climate change!!!!
Serious question - why are there so many patrons for this channel? How much does a channel with this many patrons bring in? How much does the average person give and how often? I always imagined a channel like this would have very few patrons but I'm clearly wrong.
Gobs of lithium, and it's all for us in the USA!
Unless Hillary sells it to russia like she did our uranium stockpile
I was wondering why we hadn't invaded Bolivia, yet.
You can have it... I'm going with the sodium technology!
No way to land ships, you gotta drive trucks and tanks up mountains @@yzettasmith4194
I kinda wonder WHO geologyhub is...anyone know? I mean if I called the Canadian version of the USGS (i assume this would be the "authority" in this kind of thing)
And told them I saw a plume that looked pretty sus as a fumorole this on social media vid, "you might wanna go check this out" I HIGHLY DOUBT they'd dispatch a helicopter to go eyeball it.
Maybe, just maybe if the location was kinda near a CGS (Canuck Geological Survey?!😜) office, maybe the guy on duty would consider "gee golly, it WOULD be nice to get outa the office for a few hours, I'll go chech this out, eh? Like 4 man ours and a half tank of gas? Sure yoo betcha... (maybe)
But thousands of dollars of flight crew, fuel and maintenance? Prolly not... by golly.
Just sayin... our boy got pull. 😜
"This channel is run by a full time geologist/volcanologist who graduated from Arizona State University." sure that helps :)
Blud just no
Canada is most at risk of that fumarole in Ottawa -- Justine (sic) Trudeau
Fumaroles aren’t a risk
Some vent sulfur dioxide -- THAT IS a risk@@EperogiLimousine