Deep within the Yellowstone Caldera, the bowl-shaped rock cauldron at the heart of Yellowstone National Park, there’s a clue ...
One volcanologist who has spent time studying the volcano said the devastation its eruption would cause would be "complete ...
The giant supervolcano that lies under Yellowstone National Park is cooling off in the west but staying hot in the northeast.
It’s not hard to see why researchers are worried about a Yellowstone ... of future volcanic activity. While past rhyolitic eruptions were distributed across the caldera, the northeast region ...
Large explosive eruptions occur in Yellowstone around once every 700,000 years, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Despite an explosive summer at Yellowstone National Park ... Since its formation, the caldera has seen relatively limited volcanic activity. The most recent rhyolitic lava flows occurred ...
Yellowstone’s supervolcano is showing signs of awakening after 160,000 years. Find out how scientists are tracking magma ...
Magma underneath the Yellowstone Caldera — one of Earth’s biggest volcanic complexes — may be moving northeast, according to a study released by the United States Geological Survey (USGS ...
Yellowstone National Park, known for erupting geysers like Old Faithful, is home to one of earth’s largest volcanic systems, ...
This is a significant change. For the last 160,000 years, rhyolitic volcanic activity has occurred across the majority of the Yellowstone Caldera with the exclusion of this northeast region ...
Scientists are tracking changes at the giant supervolcano that lies under ... The findings mean that the future of volcanic activity at Yellowstone is in the northeastern part of the park, and ...