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  5. Page 3
Home»Posts tagged with»volcanoes (Page 3)

Sifting Volcano Paydirt to Help Forecast Eruptions

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Oct 4, 2019   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Sifting Volcano Paydirt to Help Forecast Eruptions

More than 100 volcanoes pimple the adolescent skin of Alaska, spreading from ear to ear. Some are loud, flamboyant and obnoxious. Others are sneaky and quiet, escaping notice until a pilot sees a gray plume that wasn’t there yesterday. Because people live on the slopes of these volcanoes and thousands more fly through their blast […]

Volcanoes, Permafrost, Earthquakes Shape Alaska

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jul 16, 2019   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Volcanoes, Permafrost, Earthquakes Shape Alaska

  Forty-one volcanoes that have erupted since the 1700s. Eleven percent of the world’s earthquakes. Glaciers of an ever-changing number that probably tops 100,000. Alaska has its share of superlatives, and here’s another one — Alaska has the largest maar on Earth. What’s a maar? It looks a lot like a lake, it’s circular and […]

Alaska Hot Springs, Far and Wide

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Apr 13, 2018   The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Alaska Hot Springs, Far and Wide

KANUTI HOT SPRINGS — After a few hours of skiing through deep snow, Forest Wagner and I smelled a tuna sandwich. We knew we were closing in on warm pools of water. From the frozen Kanuti River, we moved along an open stream up toward Kanuti Hot Springs, one of more than 100 hot springs […]

Arc Volcano Releases Mix of Material from Earth’s Mantle and Crust

By Hannah Hickey | University of Washington on Jun 15, 2016   Featured, Science/Education  

Arc Volcano Releases Mix of Material from Earth’s Mantle and Crust

Volcanoes are an explosive and mysterious process by which molten rock from Earth’s interior escapes back into the atmosphere. Why the volcano erupts – and where it draws its lava from – could help trace the lifecycle of materials that make up our planet. New University of Washington research shows that a common type of […]

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