Archive forDecember, 2009

Spectacular Sea Eruption Filmed — Deepest Ever

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/12/091217-west-mata-submarine-volcano-video.html

Spectacular Sea Eruption Filmed — Deepest Ever The video player is loading. If it does not appear shortly, you may need to enable JavaScript in your Web browser and/or get the latest Flash Player plug-in to view it. Email to a Friend View All News Videos What’s This? SHARE Digg StumbleUpon Reddit RELATED * VIDEO: Deep-Sea Eruption, Odd Animals Seen * Underwater Pictures December 17, 2009—See the recent “underwater Fourth of July” scientists believe is the deepest volcanic eruption ever seen—with three-foot-wide lava bubbles and flows creeping over the seafloor. © 2009 National Geographic; Video courtesy National Science Foundation and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Unedited Transcript Researchers witnessed a spectacular, fiery underwater volcano explosion, and captured it on video. Its believed to be the deepest ocean volcano eruption ever recorded. The undersea Pacific Ocean explosions in May of this year were recorded using a remote operating vehicle. Under the tone of the vehicle motors, recorded by a hydrophone, you can hear the muffled sounds of the explosions, still audible under 4,000 feet of ocean water. An expedition team, which included researchers from the University of Washington and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, was conducting observations in an area of the Pacific bounded by the island nations of Samoa, Tonga and Fiji. The eruption was southeast of Samoa. One of the lead scientists called it, an underwater Fourth of July. Images show large molten lava bubbles about three feet across; glowing red vents ejecting lava into the sea, and lava flows across the seafloor. This West Mata volcano stands more than a mile high off the ocean floor. Its eruptive area is about the length of a football field. It is producing Boninite lavas, believed to be among the hottest erupting on Earth in modern times. Researchers believe they have a unique chance to study magma formation and how the Earth recycles material where tectonic plates slide against each other. A microbiologist on the team found diverse microbes in the extreme conditions, and they observed a small species of shrimp thriving. Its believed to be the same shrimp species found at eruptive sites more than 3,000 miles away. Mission scientists believe 80 percent of eruptive activity on Earth occurs in the ocean, and most volcanoes are in the deep sea. But until this discovery, NOAA and the National Science Foundation had sponsored submarine volcano research for 25 years, without observing a deep-ocean eruption like this one, which is now recorded for all of us to see.

Tags: Deepest Ocean, Flash Player Plug, Fourth Of July Images, Hydrophone, Lava Bubbles, Lava Flows, Length Of A Football Field, Molten Lava, National Oceanic And Atmospheric Administration, National Science Foundation, Ocean Floor, Ocean Water, Odd Animals, Seafloor, Spectacular Sea, Submarine Volcano, Three Feet, Underwater Volcano, Volcanic Eruption, Volcano Eruption

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CURIOUS EVENTS IN NEBRASKA:

CURIOUS EVENTS IN NEBRASKA: Earthquakes don’t rock Nebraska very often. In fact, seismically speaking, it is one of the quietest places in North America. Nevertheless, on Dec. 16th at 8:54 pm CST, USGS seismographs detected a magnitude 3.5 temblor centered near Auburn, Nebraska:


Click to view earthquake details and Nebraska seismic probabilities

“It sounded like those loud grain haulers that drive by, but about five times louder,” reports Laurie Riley, who lives near the epicenter. “The whole house shook. My kids came running down stairs – they were scared. It even moved my car, [which was parked outside on icy ground].”

And then the really curious thing happened.

Minutes after the quake, around 9 pm CST, lightning-like flashes lit up the skies around the area of the quake. Telephones in police departments and TV stations rang with reports of bright lights, loud rumbles and shaking ground. Sky watchers, not only in southeastern Nebraska, but also in neighboring Oklahoma, Missouri and Kansas, saw a “bright fireball” with “green streamers” moving from northwest to southeast.

Could these events be connected? Nebraska State Trooper Jerry Chab, an experienced amateur astronomer who witnessed the lights and was one of the first to report them, says no. “I think we have the most cosmic of coincidences: A bright [meteoritic] fireball around the same time as an earthquake.” Indeed, eyewitness descriptions of the fireball are consistent with a meteoroid disintegrating in the atmosphere. On the other hand, several readers have pointed out scientific studies that associate lightning-like phenomena (including ball lightning) with earthquakes: #1, #2, #3. The fireball, they suggest, might have been a rare manifestation of “earthquake lightning.”

More reports could help sort out the possibilities. Readers with photos or eyewitness accounts are encouraged to submit their observations.

Tags: Amateur Astronomer, Auburn Nebraska, Ball Lightning, Bright Fireball, Bright Lights, Coincidences, Curious Events, Curious Thing, Epicenter, Eyewitness Accounts, Laurie Riley, Meteoroid, Nebraska State, Police Departments, Seismographs, Sky Watchers, Southeastern Nebraska, State Trooper, Streamers, Temblor

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