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Giant Explosion at Yellowstone Sends Tourists Running for Cover

Giant Explosion at Yellowstone Sends Tourists Running for Cover

No tourists were injured, the boardwalk in the area took a serious hit.

I have occasionally covered news about Yellowstone National Park. As a reminder, it lies on top of a huge magma chamber and is classified as a super-volcano.

In fact, Yellowstone is essentially one big volcano.

While geologists do not anticipate significant volcanic activity for the next few thousand years, the park sometimes dishes out a little surprise that does more than simply entertain and inspire the tourists.

On Tuesday, a hydrothermal vent exploded at Biscuit Basin, which is located just north of Old Faithful.

Biscuit Basin, its parking lot and boardwalks – about 2 miles northwest of the Old Faithful geyser – are temporarily closed for safety reasons, officials added in the post.

No injuries were reported after the incident, which occurred near the Sapphire Pool around 10 a.m. local time. Investigators have yet to determine how much damage has occurred.

“Hydrothermal explosions are violent and dramatic events resulting in the rapid ejection of boiling water, steam, mud, and rock fragments,” according to the US Geological Survey.

They “occur where shallow interconnected reservoirs of fluids with temperatures at or near the boiling point underlie thermal fields. These fluids can rapidly transition to steam if the pressure suddenly drops. Since vapor molecules take up much more space than liquid molecules, the transition to steam results in significant expansion and blows apart surrounding rocks and ejects debris,” the agency says.

Usually, visitors are happy to see a geologic show at the park, though usually not so up close and personal. It turns out the Yellowstone area has about 2 of these hydrothermal explosions a year, though not normally in the sections popular with the public.

Explosions like the one on Tuesday happen when water suddenly turns to steam in the underground “plumbing” beneath the park’s hydrothermal system, [Michael Poland, the scientist in charge at the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory] said. The change can be caused by a major event like an earthquake. “That’s not the case here,” he said. “Instead, what we had was a very localized change in this plumbing system. Pressure can build and you can get an explosion like this.”

Similar explosions took place in the Norris Geyser Basin earlier this year and at Biscuit Basin in 2009.

In a statement, U.S. Geological Survey officials assured that the episode was not connected to a change in volcanic activity, either. (Yes, Yellowstone also has volcanic activity).

Hydrothermal explosions in the park are fairly common — taking place as often as twice a year, frequently in the backcountry — but can go undetected other than by monitoring equipment, according to Mr. Poland. This explosion, however, was fully documented by tourists with smartphones. “It’s really quite dramatic,” Mr. Poland said of the footage.

Though no tourists were injured, the boardwalk in the area took a serious hit.

The explosion might have been surprising, but geologists assure us it is not a sign of an impending eruption — its more like the localized pressure buildup. And while it will erupt again, there will be ample warnings.

“Yellowstone will reawaken someday to host more eruptions. But volcanoes like Yellowstone don’t erupt without warning. We’d expect months of intense activity prior to any future eruption.”

The YVO is watching closely for that activity. The team includes staff from a variety of different universities, along with federal and state geological agencies, who have considerable experience forecasting eruptions at volcanoes around the world. In fact, the volcano program at the USGS has a twenty-person unit that specializes in forecasting volcanic eruptions.

“At any given time, 10 to 20 volcanoes are erupting somewhere on Earth. Typically, volcanoes give weeks to months of warning prior to their initial eruption. Volcanoes like Yellowstone typically take even longer.” explained Lowenstern.

“Our monitoring network measures earthquakes, ground deformation, tilt, temperature and geothermal discharge. We use instruments like seismometers, GPS antennas, thermistors, and satellite technologies including LANDSAT and interferometric radar.”

The super=volcano has erupted twice in history, and covered the region in 250 cubic miles of debris — enough to cover the state of Texas in 5 feet of debris.

Fortunately, it does not seem to be poised to erupt soon, forcing a cancellation in the November election or any other national crisis.

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Comments

We live in NW Wyoming and have seen a lot of hydrological changes in the past decade. There’s a reservoir (actually two of them) just outside of Cody, WY where the water levels have fluctuated hugely in the past dozen years. East and West Newton Lakes had undergone a flooding phase where the water levels slowly rose something like 20 feet over the course of 10 years, covering up picnic areas, boat ramps and parking areas.

Since 2020 the level have been dropping, and you can now picnic back on concrete tables where just five years ago I was catching cutthroat trout out from under them (the fish loved the cover from eagles and osprey). There’s a signpost where the base is now dozens of feet from the water’s edge; five years ago the top of the sign (10 feet in the air) was 3 or 4 feet underwater. It’s an amazing change to see, and nobody has a good explanation for it.

Since everything around here, hot springs and water levels, are all connected in some way to the Yellowstone caldera and its associated hydrothermal system (and minor earthquakes) it’s not unusual for systems to change like that.

    Have they measured the depth in the middle of the lake during that time?
    Was it rising water or rising bottom-of-the-lake?

E Howard Hunt | July 24, 2024 at 10:53 am

Both MAGMA and MAGA are ascendant.

Alex deWynter | July 24, 2024 at 11:08 am

Wow, it’s a miracle nobody was scalded or hit by flying rocks.

This sort of thing is why I laugh in the face of climate activists. There’s nothing mankind can do in the course of normal everyday life that is going to change something like the climate or other Titanic natural forces like geologically events. But I expect someone will blame climate change for this as well

    GWB in reply to Ironclaw. | July 24, 2024 at 11:30 am

    Of course! If the earth is getting hotter, that would make the magma boil, right? See how easy that science was?
    /eyeroll/

      destroycommunism in reply to GWB. | July 24, 2024 at 1:23 pm

      no you’re missing the point

      we knowwww the climate changes

      but we know the typical lefty “solution” to punish the middle class is never ever the correct solution

Tourists: Wow, look at that! Eeeeeeee!!!!!111!!!1!!!!!!! Run!
Yellowstone: Are you not entertained?!

Immediately after fleeing and surviving an explosive scalding water and rocky mud event at YS thermal pools? The first thing one should do is rush back in and gawp slack-jawed at the explosive nature of scaldy pools of rocky mud.

And remember to bring the kids and family dog.

This message brought to you by Natural Pitfalls in the DNA Pool.

“huge MAGMA chamber and is classified as a super-volcano.”

Change ONE LETTER, and it’s all Trump’s fault.. 🙂

destroycommunism | July 24, 2024 at 1:21 pm

yellowstone shot out its kidney stone

destroycommunism | July 24, 2024 at 6:05 pm

thinking clark griswold caused this

It’s nice to know the progress of the Florence, Oregon Beach Debris Disposal Team on their long journey to Nantucket.