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posted by martyb on Tuesday April 09 2019, @03:57PM   Printer-friendly
from the buy-guns-and-tons-of-MREs dept.

https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1110887/nasa-news-yellowstone-volcano-Caldera-eruption-supervolcano-asteroid-end-of-the-world

A NASA thought experiment called, Defending Human Civilisation From Supervolcanic Eruptions, stated that a supervolcano eruption was more likely to happen in the future than an asteroid hitting the earth, according to the Daily Star. It said: “Supervolcanic eruptions occur more frequently than a large asteroid or comet impacts that would have a similarly catastrophic effect to human civilization.” Jet Propulsion Laboratory researchers found that collisions from asteroids which are more than 2km in diameter occurred “half as often as supervolcanic eruptions”.

[...]Yellowstone Caldera[*] is classed as a supervolcano which erupted 60,000 years ago and again 60,000 years before that.

Although there is no guarantee, if the volcano follows the same pattern then it is now due for another eruption.

Researchers have found that if a supervolcano like Yellowstone did erupt, then a “volcanic winter” would ensue which could surpass the “amount of stored food worldwide”.

People living on another continent would not be spared from the aftermath of a supervolcanic eruption.

[*] Wikipedia entry on the Yellowstone Caldera (aka Supervolcano).

The referenced NASA document — Defending Human Civilization From Supervolcanic Eruptions (pdf) — is less sensational; here is the abstract from the paper:

Large volcanic eruptions greater or equal to a magnitude 8 on the Volcanic Explosivity Index (i.e., supervolcanic eruptions) eject >10 15 kg of ash and sulfate aerosols, sufficient to blanket sizeable fractions of continents and create a regional or global "volcanic winter." Such events could seriously reduce worldwide agricultural production for multiple years, causing mass famine. Supervolcanic eruptions occur more frequently than large asteroid or comet impacts that would have a similarly catastrophic effect to human civilization, especially now that many asteroid orbits have been mapped. We assess whether future supervolcanic eruptions could be dampened, delayed, or prevented by engineering solutions.


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by broggyr on Tuesday April 09 2019, @05:04PM (1 child)

    by broggyr (3589) <broggyrNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Tuesday April 09 2019, @05:04PM (#826899)

    I thought the super-volcano in Yellowstone last erupted about 630,000 years ago, not 60,000 years...

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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by khallow on Tuesday April 09 2019, @05:20PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday April 09 2019, @05:20PM (#826917) Journal
    The last major caldera eruption was 630k years ago. The last known minor caldera eruption was about 174k years ago, forming West Thumb [yellowstone.net] (supposedly similar in size to the eruption that formed Crater Lake, so maybe somewhere in the neighborhood of 50 cubic km). The last known eruption was about 70k years ago and formed Pitchstone Plateau [trailguidesyellowstone.com] with a volume of lava around 1 cubic km.