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GeoActiveGeoActive 432 OnlineOnline What is a ? by John Davidson

HE TERM supervolcano Twas first used in the year 2000 to describe a small number of giant volcanoes that have D E produced rare but catastrophic Yellowstone G Long Valley eruptions. Somewhere in the Campi Flegrei Aso world a supervolcano erupts C roughly every 50,000 to 100,000 A Toba years and blasts over 1,000 B F cubic km (km3) of material into the air. Supervolcanoes are very Taupo large and usually 50 to 100 km in diameter. Figure 1 shows H the location of the world’s Key known supervolcanoes. Some Supervolcano eruption in the last 2 million years supervolcanoes are located in Figure 1: World distribution of supervolcanoes areas of dense human population, in South-east Asia, western USA, Japan and Italy, and they have Supervolcano Country GeoActiveDate Series of 21 eruption Issue 2 Volume of ejected 3 attracted considerable interest Fig 432_01 Mac/eps/illustrator(years before 11 s/s material (km ) NELSON THORNESpresent) PUBLISHING from geographers and geologists Artist: David Russell Illustration because they are potentially Long Valley USA 760,000 560 very dangerous and not fully , understood. The dates of historic Creek, USA 640,000 1,000 supervolcano eruptions in the Yellowstone last million years are shown in Whakamaru 254,000 2,000 Figure 2. As no supervolcano has Aso Japan 80,000 600 produced a full-scale eruption in Mount Toba, Indonesia 74,000 2,800 the last 2,000 years, we can only Sumatra work out from rocks and fossils Campi Flegrei Italy 39,000 500 how extreme their eruptions can Taupo New Zealand 26,500 1,170 be. Figure 2: Dates of historic supervolcano eruptions Geologists classify volcanoes into eight types using the How do supervolcanoes rather like air rushing out of a Explosivity Index (VEI), erupt? balloon that has been burst. which is based on the types Geologists believe that beneath 2 The pressure from the rising of eruption (Figure 3). Runny each supervolcano there is a bubble of magma underneath lava (Hawaiian-type) volcanoes very large bubble of very sticky literally pushes off the lid of found along mid-ocean ridges let magma tens of kilometres across. overlying rock, in the same gases escape easily. Cone-shaped This bubble of magma becomes way that floodwater in an composite volcanoes found along trapped under overlying rock, underground drain can lift up destructive plate boundaries with water vapour, carbon manhole covers in a road. With have sticky and produce dioxide and sulphur dioxide the overlying lid gone, the whole explosive eruptions graded trapped within it. magma bubble bursts out. from 2 to 7. Supervolcanoes are 3 A sudden drop in pressure, graded VEI 8, the most explosive Supervolcanic eruptions may be produced as the magma nears category. Figure 4 shows the main started in three ways: the surface, may cause dissolved differences between a composite 1 An earthquake cracks the rock gases in the liquid magma to volcano and a supervolcano. above it and suddenly releases be released from solution. the magma which explodes out, The whole magma mass then

Series 21 Spring issue Unit 432 What is a Supervolcano? © 2010 Nelson Thornes GeoActive Online This page may be photocopied for use within the purchasing institution only. Page 1 of 4 VEI Classification Description Height of ash Amount of material Example plume ejected 1 Hawaiian Non-explosive/ 100–1,000 metres Less than 1 million m3 Mauna Loa, Hawaii gentle 2 Strombolian Explosive 1–5 km 1 million to 10 million Stromboli, Italy m3 3 Vulcanian Severe explosive 3–15 km 10 million m3 to 0.1 Vulcano, Italy km3 4 Pelean Cataclysmic 10–25 km 0.1 km3 to 1 km3 Mount Pelée, Martinique 1902 5 Plinian Paroxysmal Over 25 km 1 km3 to 10 km3 Mount St Helens, USA 1980 6 Ultra-Plinian Colossal Over 25 km 10 km3 to 100 km3 Mount Pinatubo, Philippines 1991 7 Ultra-Plinian Super-colossal Over 25 km 100 km3 to 1,000 km3 Tambora, Indonesia 1815 8 Supervolcano Mega-colossal Over 25 km Over 1,000 km3 Mount Toba, Sumatra, 74,000 years ago Figure 3: Volcano Explosivity Index (VEI)

becomes a massive explosive COMPOSITE VOLCANO SUPERVOLCANO froth which blasts out of the Example, Mt St Helens ground – rather as a bottle of

fizzy drink can explode if it is Main vent shaken very violently. Caldera Layers of ash Possible and lava side vents Smaller volcano Scientists believe that a or steam eruption/ geyser Rising dome supervolcano produces a massive Lake explosion which literally blasts

the crust and molten froth into Local Local rocks rocks the air. Ash is blown over 30 Magma km up into the atmosphere. bubble Faults Some remains airborne for many months, drifting around the

Earth and gradually falling like Magma grey snow, but large amounts chamber Rising magma from below collapse back down to Earth Figure 4: Differences between composite volcanoes and supervolcanoes while still very hot and then travel long distances over the amount of material from a ground as pyroclastic flows. What are their effects? descending plate beginsGeoActive to rise Series 21 Issue 2 When all the magma has been Fig 432_04 Mac/eps/illustratorUsing 11 evidences/s such as ash and back up to the surface. This erupted, a deep crater is left NELSON THORNES PUBLISHINfossil remains,G geologists have magma rises up underArtist: the David Russell Illustration behind called a caldera (from the worked out that a supervolcano continental crust and produces a Latin word for cauldron). These eruption could produce the very sticky mass of molten rock depressions are often over 50 following effects: rich in silica. km in diameter, and sometimes 3 fill with water. Figure 5 shows 2 Above continental ‘hotspots’ • Between 1,000 and 3,000 km an example of such a depression where a large bubble of rising of ash are blasted up into the as a cross-section through the magma is pushing up through atmosphere. Long Valley caldera in the Sierra the plate and heating the • Ash fall between 1 and 5 metres Nevada mountains east of San continental crust. deep can occur up to 1,000 km Francisco. Figure 6 show how from the supervolcano. In both these cases, the crust supervolcano eruptions compare • The cloud of ash can block out is being extended locally with more recent volcanic events. solar radiation causing a ‘volcanic or ‘stretched’, producing winter’, which may last from one weaknesses that allow the magma How and why do to five years. Estimates suggest bubbles (sometimes called supervolcanoes form? worldwide falls in temperature plumes) to rise up towards the of between 5° and 10°C, possibly Supervolcanoes mainly occur in surface over a long period of resulting in an ice age. areas of continental crust in two time. This steady flow of hot types of location: rock over thousands of years • The explosive eruption could 1 Near destructive plate forms the large magma destroy everything within a boundaries where a large beneath supervolcanoes. radius of 500 km.

GeoActive Online Series 21 Spring issue Unit 432 What is a Supervolcano? © 2010 Nelson Thornes Page 2 of 4 This page may be photocopied for use within the purchasing institution only. Caldera Case Study Mammoth Mountain Glass Mountain Dome Yellowstone

Deposits of ash/lava The Yellowstone caldera is Faults located in the north-west corner Faults Solid magma 5 km of the state of Wyoming in the USA and measures 55 km by Rising magma 10 km 72 km. Yellowstone lies over bubble a hotspot where a large mass of magma is rising up from 15 km the mantle. The Yellowstone supervolcano has erupted at 20 km least twelve times in the last 15 million years, at regular intervals Rising magma of about 600,000 years. The last supervolcano eruption was Local extension (stretching) of crust 640,000 years ago. Previous Figure 5: Cross-section through a caldera (Long Valley, California) eruptions have produced a blast zone of 1,000 km and ash fall up GeoActive Seriesto 21 1,600 Issue 2km from Yellowstone Volcano Country Date Volume ofFig material 432_05 Mac/eps/illustrator (see Figure 11 s/s8) and today 20 ejected (kmNELSON3) THORNES PUBLISHING Artist: David Russellmillion Illustration people live within Mount St Helens, USA 1980 0.25 1,000 km of the supervolcano. Washington COMPOSITE VOLCANO SUPERVOLCANO Earthquakes occur frequently Mount PinatuboExample, Mt StPhilippines Helens 1991 5 and Yellowstone is swelling Tambora Indonesia 1815 160 by 1–3 cm every year, which

Campi Flegrei Main venItalyt 39,000 years ago 500 may indicate increasing magma Caldera Long Valley USA 760,000 years ago 560 pressure below. The Yellowstone Layers of ash Possible caldera,and lava California side vents Smaller volcano Volcano Observatory will issue or steam eruption/ warnings based on earthquake geyser Rising dome Lava Creek, USA 640,000 years ago 1,000Lake Yellowstone readings if an eruption is believed to be imminent and Lake Taupo New Zealand 26,500 years ago 1,170 Local Local the State of Wyoming has rocks rocks Mount Toba, Indonesia 74,000 years ago Magma 2,800 evacuation plans in place, but Sumatra bubble Faults a supervolcano eruption here Figure 6: Comparison of supervolcano eruptions and some recent eruptions could destroy much of the farming across the USA, and • An erupting Magmasupervolcano on earthquakes and the changing make large areas of the continent Rising magma from below the coast couldchamber trigger massive shape of the volcano, but it is uninhabitable. wave surges (tsunamis) which difficult to predict precisely may travel up to 5,000 km. when a volcano will erupt Conclusion • Poisonous gases could and how massive the eruption Supervolcanoes are hard contaminate water supplies and will be. Some supervolcanoes to predict. Geologists have rainfall. like Yellowstone are now calculated that there could be at intensively monitored, but less • People and animals would be least one VEI 7 or VEI 8 super- is known about those in remote eruption in the next hundred severely affected worldwide. areas where there is a lack of The effects would include years and it is very unlikely that equipment. Scientists know that humans would be able to prevent burying crops and other plants, supervolcanoes will erupt in the damage to health from gases and or stop a supervolcano eruption. future – and the Earth is five However, research may make the breathing in ash, polluted water times more likely to be affected supplies and climate change. prediction of future eruptions by a supervolcano eruption than easier. to be hit by an asteroid! Figure Can we predict 7 on page 4 is a summary of the supervolcano eruptions? last major supervolcano eruption In recent years scientists have on Mount Toba in Sumatra, and been studying volcanoes and the case study of Yellowstone attempting to predict their suggests how human populations behaviour by looking at how are at risk. rising magma may be linked to

Series 21 Spring issue Unit 432 What is a Supervolcano? © 2010 Nelson Thornes GeoActive Online This page may be photocopied for use within the purchasing institution only. Page 3 of 4 Where? In the northern part of the Indonesian island of Sumatra (an area of continental crust). Activities When? 74,000 years ago. 3 1 On a copy of Figure 1, name: What happened? A VEI 8 eruption blasted out nearly 3,000 km of ash (a) the oceans A, B and C and pyroclastics which were deposited over a large area of Asia. About two-thirds of this raced across the (b) the continents D, E and F ground as scorching hot pyroclastic flows destroying (c) the countries G and H. everything in their path. The remaining third fell as ash covering South-east Asia and India in layers several 2 Using the data in Figure 2, metres thick. Large quantities of sulphuric acid were plot a supervolcano time line ejected into the atmosphere producing acid rain on graph paper, to show the around the world. The volcano finally collapsed into a amount of material ejected by caldera 100 km long and 30 km wide, now called . the supervolcano on the vertical What were the effects? The ash clouds from Mount Toba cooled the Earth by axis, and the date of the eruption 3–4°C for several years, causing a ‘volcanic winter’. in years before present on the Fossil evidence suggests that very few plants and horizontal axis. You could use animals survived in South-east Asia. Some scientists a computer spreadsheet to help believe that the eruption may have led to the deaths of you with this task. up to a staggering 80% of our human ancestors on the planet at this time. 3 Using Figures 4 and 5, Figure 7: Factfile: Mount Toba, Sumatra describe three main differences between a composite volcano Key such as Mount Pinatubo and a N CANADA Area of ash deposits from Yellowstone Lava Creek eruption 640,000 years ago supervolcano. Mt St Helens 1980 4 Referring to Figure 7, suggest Yellowstone three reasons why scientists think supervolcano that so many plants and animals, including humans, were killed by the supervolcano eruption of Long Valley caldera Mount Toba 74,000 years ago. USA

5 Using Figure 8 and the internet, write a description of the Yellowstone supervolcano using the following headings: • What is the present volcanic MEXICO activity in the region? 0 800 km • What are the present uses that an eruption might affect? Figure 8: Location of volcanoes and supervolcanoes in the USA GeoActive Series 21 Issue 2 • How is volcanic activity in the 7 Write a short article forFig a 432_08 Mac/eps/illustrator9 Using the 11 internet, s/s find area being monitored? magazine suggesting why moneyNELSON THORNESout what PUBLISHING is meant by a should be spent by governmentsArtist: David Russell‘volcanic Illustration winter’. Write a 6 Before answering this on finding out more about short explanation of how a question, try to view an extract supervolcanoes and their supervolcano eruption could of the BBC Horizon TV eruptions. affect the whole planet. (There programme on Yellowstone. are articles on this on the BBC Extracts are available on the 8 Imagine you had the job of News website: http://news.bbc. web: www.bbc.co.uk/science/ explaining to people in an area co.uk) horizon/1999/supervolcanoes. near a supervolcano who did not shtml want to move, why they might Using Figure 8, suggest five need to be evacuated in the different ways in which the future if the volcano suddenly present human population of became dangerous. Design a the USA would be at risk if a poster or cartoon strip to show supervolcano eruption occurred the main hazards that could at either Yellowstone or Long affect people if they did not Valley in the USA. leave.

GeoActive Online Series 21 Spring issue Unit 432 What is a Supervolcano? © 2010 Nelson Thornes Page 4 of 4 This page may be photocopied for use within the purchasing institution only.