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Supervolcano

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World map of known VEI 7 and VEI 8 volcanoes
VEI 8 (supervolcanoes)
VEI 7

Asupervolcanois avolcanothat has had aneruptionwith avolcanic explosivity index(VEI) of 8,[1]the largest recorded value on the index. This means the volume of deposits for such an eruption is greater than 1,000 cubic kilometers (240 cubic miles).[2]

Location of Yellowstone hotspot over time. Numbers indicate millions of years before the present.
Satellite image ofLake Toba,the site of a VEI 8 eruption c. 75,000 years ago
Cross-section throughLong Valley Caldera

Supervolcanoes occur whenmagmain themantlerises into thecrustbut is unable to break through it. Pressure builds in a large and growing magma pool until the crust is unable to contain the pressure and ruptures. This can occur athotspots(for example,Yellowstone Caldera) or atsubductionzones (for example,Toba).[3][4]

Large-volume supervolcanic eruptions are also often associated withlarge igneous provinces,which can cover huge areas with lava andvolcanic ash.These can cause long-lastingclimate change(such as thetriggering of a small ice age) andthreaten species with extinction.TheOruanui eruptionof New Zealand'sTaupō Volcano(about 25,600 years ago) was the world's most recent VEI-8 eruption.[5]

Terminology

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The term "supervolcano" was first used in a volcanic context in 1949.[6][7] [note 1]Its origins lie in an early 20th-century scientific debate about the geological history and features of theThree Sistersvolcanic region ofOregonin the United States. In 1925, Edwin T. Hodge suggested that a very large volcano, which he namedMount Multnomah,had existed in that region.[note 2]He believed that severalpeaksin the Three Sisters area were remnants of Mount Multnomah after it had been largely destroyed by violent volcanic explosions, similarly toMount Mazama.[9]In his 1948 bookThe Ancient Volcanoes of Oregon,volcanologistHowel Williamsignored the possible existence of Mount Multnomah, but in 1949 another volcanologist, F. M. Byers Jr., reviewed the book, and in the review, Byers refers to Mount Multnomah as a "supervolcano".[10][11]

More than fifty years after Byers' review was published, the termsupervolcanowas popularised by theBBCpopular science television programHorizonin 2000, referring to eruptions that produce extremely large amounts ofejecta.[12][13]

The termmegacalderais sometimes used forcalderasupervolcanoes, such as theBlake River Megacaldera Complexin theAbitibi greenstone beltofOntarioandQuebec,Canada.[14]

Though there is no well-defined minimum explosive size for a "supervolcano", there are at least two types of volcanic eruptions that have been identified as supervolcanoes:large igneous provincesand massive eruptions.[15]

Large igneous provinces

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Map of large flood basalt igneous provinces worldwide

Large igneous provinces, such asIceland,theSiberian Traps,Deccan Traps,and theOntong Java Plateau,are extensive regions ofbasaltson a continental scale resulting fromflood basalteruptions. When created, these regions often occupy several thousand square kilometres and have volumes on the order of millions of cubic kilometers. In most cases, the lavas are normally laid down over several million years. They release large amounts of gases.

TheRéunion hotspotproduced the Deccan Traps about 66 million years ago, coincident with theCretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.The scientific consensus is thatan asteroid impactwas the cause of the extinction event, but the volcanic activity may have caused environmental stresses on extant species up to theCretaceous–Paleogene boundary.[16]Additionally, the largest flood basalt event (the Siberian Traps) occurred around 250 million years ago and was coincident with the largest mass extinction in history, thePermian–Triassic extinction event,although it is unknown whether it was solely responsible for the extinction event.

Such outpourings are not explosive, thoughlava fountainsmay occur. Many volcanologists considerIcelandto be a large igneous province that is currently being formed. The last major outpouring occurred in 1783–84 from theLaki fissure,which is approximately 40 km (25 mi) long. An estimated 14 km3(3.4 cu mi) of basaltic lava was poured out during the eruption (VEI 4).

The Ontong Java Plateau has an area of about 2,000,000 km2(770,000 sq mi), and the province was at least 50% larger before theManihikiandHikurangi Plateausbroke away.

Massive explosive eruptions

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Volcanic eruptions are classified using thevolcanic explosivity index.It is alogarithmic scale,and an increase of one in VEI number is equivalent to a tenfold increase in volume of erupted material. VEI 7 or VEI 8 eruptions are so powerful that they often form circular calderas rather thanconesbecause the downward withdrawal of magma causes the overlying rock mass to collapse into the emptymagma chamberbeneath it.

Known super eruptions

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Based on incomplete statistics, at least 60 VEI 8 eruptions have been identified.[15][17]

Well-known VEI 8 eruptions
Name Zone Location Notes Years ago (approx.) Ejecta bulk volume (approx.) Reference
Youngest Toba eruption Toba Caldera,North Sumatra Sumatra,Indonesia Produced 439–631 million tons ofsulfuric acid 75,000 2,000–13,200 km3 [18][19][20][21][22][23][24]
Flat Landing Brook Formation Tetagouche Group New Brunswick,Canada Possibly the largest known supereruption. Existence as a single eruption is controversial, and it could have been a multiple 2,000+ km3event that spanned less than a million years 466,000,000 2,000–12,000 km3 [25][26]
Wah Wah Springs Caldera Indian Peak–Caliente Caldera Complex Utah,United States The largest of the Indian Peak-Caliente Caldera Complex eruptions, preserved as the Wah Wah Springs Tuff; includes pyroclastic flows more than 500 meters (1,600 ft) thick 30,600,000 5,500–5,900 km3 [27][28]
La Garita Caldera San Juan volcanic field Colorado,United States Fish Canyon eruption 27,800,000 5,000 km3 [29][30]
Grey's Landing Supereruption Yellowstone hotspot United States Deposited the Grey's Landing Ignimbrite 8,720,000 2,800 km3 [31]
La Pacana Andes Central Volcanic Zone Chile Responsible for the Antana Ignimbrite 4,000,000 2,500 km3 [32]
Huckleberry Ridge eruption Yellowstone hotspot Idaho,United States Huckleberry Ridge Tuff; consisted of three distinct eruptions separated by years to decades 2,100,000 2,450–2,500 km3 [33][34]
Whakamaru Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone North Island,New Zealand Whakamaru Ignimbrite/Mount Curl Tephra 340,000 2,000 km3 [35]
Heise Volcanic Field Yellowstone hotspot Idaho,United States Kilgore Tuff 4,500,000 1,800 km3 [36]
McMullen Supereruption Yellowstone hotspot SouthernIdaho,United States McMullen Ignimbrite 8,990,000 1,700 km3 [31]
Heise Volcanic Field Yellowstone hotspot Idaho,United States Blacktail Tuff 6,000,000 1,500 km3 [36]
Cerro Guacha Altiplano–Puna volcanic complex Sur Lípez,Bolivia Guacha ignimbrite, two smaller eruptions identified 5,700,000 1,300 km3 [37]
Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone North Island,New Zealand Kidnappers eruption 1,080,000 1,200 km3 [38]
Oruanui eruption Taupō Volcanic Zone North Island,New Zealand Taupō Volcano(Lake Taupō) 26,500 1,170 km3 [39]
Galán Andes Central Volcanic Zone Catamarca,Argentina Consisted of three distinct eruptions, separated by 30-40 thousand years 2,500,000 1,050 km3 [40]
Lava Creek eruption Yellowstone hotspot Idaho,Montana,andWyoming,United States Lava Creek Tuff;consisted of two distinct eruptions separated by years 640,000 1,000 km3 [33][34][28]

Media portrayal

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  • Novafeatured an episode "Mystery of the Megavolcano" in September 2006 examining such eruptions in the last 100,000 years.[41]
  • Supervolcanois the title of a British-Canadian television disaster film, first released in 2005. It tells a fictional story of a supereruption at Yellowstone.
  • In the 2009 disaster film2012,a supereruption of Yellowstone is one of the events that contributes to a global cataclysm.
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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^The term was first used inConquering the World,a 1925 travelogue by Helen Bridgeman, referring to an Indian Ocean sunset in Indonesia as an upside down "super-volcano".[8]
  2. ^Subsequent research proved that each peak of the Three Sisters was formed independently, and that Mount Multnomah never existed.[citation needed]

References

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  3. ^Wotzlaw, Jörn-Frederik; Bindeman, Ilya N.; Watts, Kathryn E.; Schmitt, Axel K.; Caricchi, Luca; Schaltegger, Urs (September 2014)."Linking rapid magma reservoir assembly and eruption trigger mechanisms at evolved Yellowstone-type supervolcanoes".Geology.42(9): 807–810.Bibcode:2014Geo....42..807W.doi:10.1130/g35979.1.ISSN1943-2682.
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  22. ^Williams, M.A.J. & Royce, K. (1982). "Quaternary geology of the middle son valley, North Central India: Implications for prehistoric archaeology".Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology.38(3–4): 139.Bibcode:1982PPP....38..139W.doi:10.1016/0031-0182(82)90001-3.
  23. ^Antonio Costa; Victoria C. Smith; Giovanni Macedonio; Naomi E. Matthews (2014)."The magnitude and impact of the Youngest Toba Tuff super-eruption".Frontiers in Earth Science.2:16.Bibcode:2014FrEaS...2...16C.doi:10.3389/feart.2014.00016.
  24. ^Lin, Jiamei; Abbott, Peter M.; Sigl, Michael; Steffensen, Jørgen P.; Mulvaney, Robert; Severi, Mirko; Svensson, Anders (2023)."Bipolar ice-core records constrain possible dates and global radiative forcing following the ~74 ka Toba eruption".Quaternary Science Reviews.312:108162.Bibcode:2023QSRv..31208162L.doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2023.108162.
  25. ^"Lexique du substrat rocheux".dnr-mrn.gnb.ca.Retrieved22 December2019.
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  27. ^Tingey, David G.; Hart, Garret L.; Gromme, Sherman; Deino, Alan L.; Christiansen, Eric H.; Best, Myron G. (1 August 2013)."The 36–18 Ma Indian Peak–Caliente ignimbrite field and calderas, southeastern Great Basin, USA: Multicyclic super-eruptions".Geosphere.9(4): 864–950.Bibcode:2013Geosp...9..864B.doi:10.1130/GES00902.1.
  28. ^abKing, Hobart M."Volcanic Explosivity Index: Measuring the size of an eruption".Geology.com.
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  31. ^abKnott, Thomas; Branney, M.; Reichow, Marc; Finn, David; Tapster, Simon; Coe, Robert (June 2020)."Discovery of two new super-eruptions from the Yellowstone hotspot track (USA): Is the Yellowstone hotspot waning?".Geology.48(9): 934–938.Bibcode:2020Geo....48..934K.doi:10.1130/G47384.1.Retrieved21 June2022.
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  33. ^abLarge Holocene Eruptions.Global Volcanism Program.Archived13 February 2010 at theWayback Machine.Volcano.si.edu. Retrieved on 2011-11-18.
  34. ^ab"What is a supervolcano? What is a supereruption?".USGS.
  35. ^Froggatt, P. C.; Nelson, C. S.; Carter, L.; Griggs, G.; Black, K. P. (13 February 1986). "An exceptionally large late Quaternary eruption from New Zealand".Nature.319(6054): 578–582.Bibcode:1986Natur.319..578F.doi:10.1038/319578a0.S2CID4332421.The minimum total volume of tephra is 1,200 km3but probably nearer 2,000 km3,...
  36. ^abLisa A. Morgan & William C. McIntosh (2005). "Timing and development of the Heise volcanic field, Snake River Plain, Idaho, western USA".GSA Bulletin.117(3–4): 288–306.Bibcode:2005GSAB..117..288M.doi:10.1130/B25519.1.S2CID53648675.
  37. ^Salisbury, M. J.; Jicha, B. R.; de Silva, S. L.; Singer, B. S.; Jimenez, N. C.; Ort, M. H. (21 December 2010). "40Ar/39Ar chronostratigraphy of Altiplano-Puna volcanic complex ignimbrites reveals the development of a major magmatic province".Geological Society of America Bulletin.123(5–6): 821–840.Bibcode:2011GSAB..123..821S.doi:10.1130/B30280.1.
  38. ^Rejuvenation and Repeated Eruption of a 1.0 Ma Supervolcanic System at Mangakino Caldera, Taupo Volcanic Zone, New ZealandAmerican Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2012, abstract #V31C-2797. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  39. ^Wilson, C. J. N (1 December 2001)."The 26.5ka Oruanui eruption, New Zealand: an introduction and overview".Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research.112(1): 133–174.Bibcode:2001JVGR..112..133W.doi:10.1016/S0377-0273(01)00239-6.ISSN0377-0273.
  40. ^Kay, Suzanne Mahlburg; Coira, Beatriz; Wörner, Gerhard; Kay, Robert W.; Singer, Bradley S. (1 December 2011)."Geochemical, isotopic and single crystal 40Ar/39Ar age constraints on the evolution of the Cerro Galán ignimbrites".Bulletin of Volcanology.73(10): 1487–1511.Bibcode:2011BVol...73.1487K.doi:10.1007/s00445-010-0410-7.ISSN1432-0819.
  41. ^"Mystery of the Megavolcano"Archived17 June 2017 at theWayback Machine.Pbs.org. Accessed on 2017-10-12.

Further reading

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