You are my favorite people for off Elio AND on-Elio talk. We got talking about Yellow Stone geology in other threads, so I just thought you might like to read these clips from the web I found. It did straighten out a couple things I thought I knew.
-quote/clips-
The Yellowstone caldera the existence of which is attributed to the "Yellowstone Hotspot", exists with all modern historical features covering an area of 1575 sq miles in North America. It has hosted the biggest known event in the world, the last eruption 760,000 years ago which unleashed 8,000 times as much lava and ash as Mount St. Helens. It actually includes several large features from diverse events, including 3 calderas with other remnants including at least 3 Tuffs, these are Island Park Caldera, Huckleberry Ridge Caldera, Henry's Fork Caldera, Huckleberry Ridge Tuff, Mesa Falls Tuff, and Lava Creek Tuff.
----------------------------------
Second only to Yellowstone in North America is the Long Valley caldera, in east-central California. The 200-square-mile caldera is just south of Mono Lake, near the Nevada state line. The biggest eruption from Long Valley was 760,000 years ago, which unleashed 2,000 to 3,000 times as much lava and ash as Mount St. Helens, after which the caldera floor dropped about a MILE, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Some of the ash reached as far east as Nebraska. What worries geologists today was a swarm of strong earthquakes in 1980 and the 10-inch rise of about 100 square miles of caldera floor. Then, in the early 1990s, large amounts of carbon dioxide gas from magma below began seeping up through the ground and killing trees in the Mammoth Mountain part of the caldera. When these sorts of signs are present, it could mean trouble is centuries, decades, or even YEARS away, say volcanologists.
----------------------------------
The Lake Toba caldera in North Sumatra, Indonesia, Yellow stones big sister, 1080 square miles, blew 74,000 years ago. Ejecting many cu miles of material, (3000 Mt St Helens) and according to scientists seems responsible for bottlenecking the human RNA genome into just 12 women survivors during that world-time.
-----------------------------------
Tupo Caldera in New Zealand, 485 square miles in area, 26,500years ago and 2200years ago. 22cu miles (75 St Helens)
-----------------------------------
Aira Caldera in southern Japan. 22000years ago with 14cu miles ejected. (50 Mt St Helens)
I must surmise something here, it's not the calderas that are scary to me but the underlying 'hotspots'. These cause the formation of strings of caldera which have formed at the onset of the biggest events. The Caldera themselves continue to be active for a long time, but initially they have formed in previously featureless land.
Now, wasn't that fun?
-quote/clips-
The Yellowstone caldera the existence of which is attributed to the "Yellowstone Hotspot", exists with all modern historical features covering an area of 1575 sq miles in North America. It has hosted the biggest known event in the world, the last eruption 760,000 years ago which unleashed 8,000 times as much lava and ash as Mount St. Helens. It actually includes several large features from diverse events, including 3 calderas with other remnants including at least 3 Tuffs, these are Island Park Caldera, Huckleberry Ridge Caldera, Henry's Fork Caldera, Huckleberry Ridge Tuff, Mesa Falls Tuff, and Lava Creek Tuff.
----------------------------------
Second only to Yellowstone in North America is the Long Valley caldera, in east-central California. The 200-square-mile caldera is just south of Mono Lake, near the Nevada state line. The biggest eruption from Long Valley was 760,000 years ago, which unleashed 2,000 to 3,000 times as much lava and ash as Mount St. Helens, after which the caldera floor dropped about a MILE, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Some of the ash reached as far east as Nebraska. What worries geologists today was a swarm of strong earthquakes in 1980 and the 10-inch rise of about 100 square miles of caldera floor. Then, in the early 1990s, large amounts of carbon dioxide gas from magma below began seeping up through the ground and killing trees in the Mammoth Mountain part of the caldera. When these sorts of signs are present, it could mean trouble is centuries, decades, or even YEARS away, say volcanologists.
----------------------------------
The Lake Toba caldera in North Sumatra, Indonesia, Yellow stones big sister, 1080 square miles, blew 74,000 years ago. Ejecting many cu miles of material, (3000 Mt St Helens) and according to scientists seems responsible for bottlenecking the human RNA genome into just 12 women survivors during that world-time.
-----------------------------------
Tupo Caldera in New Zealand, 485 square miles in area, 26,500years ago and 2200years ago. 22cu miles (75 St Helens)
-----------------------------------
Aira Caldera in southern Japan. 22000years ago with 14cu miles ejected. (50 Mt St Helens)
I must surmise something here, it's not the calderas that are scary to me but the underlying 'hotspots'. These cause the formation of strings of caldera which have formed at the onset of the biggest events. The Caldera themselves continue to be active for a long time, but initially they have formed in previously featureless land.
Now, wasn't that fun?