Saturday, September 16, 2023

Week: Volcanoes

  There are about 169 volcanoes in the United States that scientists consider active (source). Most of these are located in Alaska, where eruptions occur virtually every year. Others are located throughout the West and in Hawaii (Ring of Fire anyone?). 


There are several ways we minimize the danger of volcanic activity (apart from the obvious of ‘getting out of the way’…(:

·         Forecasting (earthquakes as early warnings -although in 2014 a Japanese volcano erupted without any previous seismicity (livescience article), land swelling before eruption, gas emissions, etc.)

·         Volcanic Alert Codes (USGS): the levels of alert and the aviation code levels commonly change at the same time (chart on right). A non-erupting volcano will have a green icon, and a red one indicates an imminent eruption (see USGS Alert Codes).

Today the US hazards map (below) shows 4 volcanoes as to be above normal background (elevated unrest); map below:

Kilauea, Shishaldin, and Great Sitkin. Alert Level=WATCH. Aviation Color Code=Orange.
Trident Alert Level=ADVISORY. Aviation Color Code=Yellow.




If you want to know more about volcanoes and how we monitor them, there is a MOOC from the University of Iceland you might want to enroll into. A short video explanation here

1 comment:

  1. Hi Professor Garcia,
    It is so interesting to find out there are over 100 volcanoes in the US. I had no idea I think I am obsessed with volcanoes now. Thank God they are monitoring them and checking for gases and emissions. In the slides you talked about Mount Etna in Italy it is so crazy that they have people fully burned in museums on display in the same position they died even kids how sad. I can not wait to watch the movie about mount Etna and Italy.

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