• The next massive volcanic eruption is coming. It will cause chaos the w

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 08:56:27 2024
    XPost: talk.environment, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.global-warming

    Lava spews from the Sundhnúkur volcano on the Reykjanes Peninsula near Grindavik, Iceland, on June 2, 2024.

    CNN - Mount Tambora changed the world. In 1815, the Indonesian volcano
    exploded in the most powerful eruption in recorded history, sending an
    enormous plume of tiny sun-reflecting particles high into the atmosphere, cooling the planet and ushering in disaster.

    What followed was called the “year without a summer:” global temperatures plunged, crops failed, people starved, a cholera pandemic spread and tens
    of thousands died. Some even credit the volcano with inspiring Mary
    Shelley to write Frankenstein, while sheltering from unusually cold
    weather in Switzerland in 1816.

    Many volcanoes have erupted since, but Tambora remains the planet’s most
    recent massive eruption. More than 200 years later, scientists warn the
    world may be due another.

    The question is not if, but when, said Markus Stoffel, a climate professor
    at the University of Geneva. Geological evidence suggests a 1-in-6 chance
    of a massive eruption this century, he told CNN.

    This time, however, it would happen in a much-changed world, one which is
    not only more populated but which has also been warmed by the climate
    crisis.

    The next massive eruption will “cause climate chaos,” Stoffel said.
    “Humanity does not have any plan.”

    Mount Tambora's deep volcanic crater created by the April 1815 eruption is
    seen on June 3, 2009.

    Walkers make their way along the craters edge of Mount Tambora on July 19, 2006.

    Volcanoes have long shaped our world; they help create continents, have
    built the atmosphere and can change the climate.

    As they erupt, they eject a cocktail of lava, ash and gases, including planet-heating carbon dioxide, although in quantities dwarfed by those
    humans produce burning fossil fuels.

    When it comes to climate impact, scientists are more interested in another
    gas: sulfur dioxide.

    A massive volcanic eruption can propel sulfur dioxide through the
    troposphere — the part of the atmosphere where weather happens — and into
    the stratosphere, the layer about 7 miles above the Earth’s surface where planes fly.

    Here, it forms tiny aerosol particles which scatter sunlight, reflecting
    it back into space and cooling the planet below. These particles “will
    blow around the world and last for a couple years,” said Alan Robock, a
    climate professor at Rutgers University who has spent decades studying volcanoes.

    For modern volcanoes, satellite data shows how much sulfur dioxide is
    released. When Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines erupted in 1991, it
    propelled roughly 15 million tons into the stratosphere. This wasn’t a
    massive eruption like Tambora, but it still cooled the world by around 0.5 degrees Celsius for several years.

    For older volcanoes, however, “we have very poor data,” Stoffel said. Scientists try to reconstruct these past eruptions using information from
    ice cores and tree rings, which are like time capsules, storing secrets of
    the past atmosphere.

    From this they know massive eruptions over the last several thousand years temporarily cooled the planet by about 1 to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

    Tambora, for example, lowered average global temperatures by at least 1
    degree Celsius. There is evidence the huge Samalas eruption in Indonesia
    in 1257 may have helped trigger the “Little Ice Age,” a cold period that
    lasted hundreds of years.

    There are also indications that massive eruptions may affect rainfall,
    drying monsoon systems including those in Africa and Asia. “The monsoon in
    the summer happens because the land warms faster than the ocean,” Robock
    said. A huge volcanic eruption can disrupt the temperature difference
    between the two.

    ‘A more unstable world’
    Understanding the impacts of past massive eruptions is vital, but the next
    will happen in a world that is much warmer than before humans began
    burning large amounts of oil, coal and gas.

    “It’s a more unstable world now,” said Michael Rampino, a professor at
    NYU, who investigates links between volcanic eruptions and climate change.
    “The effects might be even worse than we saw back in 1815.”

    In what may seem a counterintuitive twist, a warmer world may mean massive volcanic eruptions have an even bigger cooling impact.

    That’s because how aerosol particles form and how they are transported is
    “all dependent on climate,” said Thomas Aubry, a physical volcanology
    scientist at the University of Exeter.

    As the world warms, the speed at which air circulates in the atmosphere is increasing, meaning aerosol particles are dispersed faster and have less
    time to grow, Aubry said. Smaller aerosols can scatter sunlight more efficiently than large ones, meaning the cooling impact will be greater.

    Volcanologist Chris Newhall works in the caldera of Mount Pinatubo taking
    air and water samples on February 18, 1992.

    Indonesia's Mount Ruang spews hot lava and smoke in April 2024.

    Oceans may also play a role. As the surface of the ocean heats up, a layer
    of lighter, warmer water sits on top and acts as a barrier to mixing
    between shallow and deeper layers. This may mean eruptions
    disproportionately cool the ocean’s top layer and the atmosphere above it, Stoffel said.

    Climate change can also affect volcanic systems themselves. Melting ice
    can lead to increased eruptions, as its disappearance decreases pressure,
    which can allow magma to rise faster. Scientists have also found more
    extreme rainfall — driven by climate change — can seep deep into the
    ground where it can react with magma to trigger an eruption, Aubry said.

    Impossible to predict
    As the world grapples with global warming, a period of cooling might sound positive. Scientists say the opposite is true.

    Lava erupts from a crater in southwest Iceland near the town of Grindavik
    in April 2024.

    First, there’s the immediate impact. An estimated 800 million people live within around 60 miles of an active volcano; a massive eruption could
    erase an entire city. Campi Flegrei, for example, has shown signs of
    stirring and sits just west of the Italian city of Naples, home to around
    1 million people.

    Longer-term, the impacts could be cataclysmic. A 1 degree Celsius drop in temperature might sound small, but it’s an average. “??If we look at
    certain regions, the impact will be much greater,” said May Chim, an Earth scientist at the University of Cambridge.

    Okmok in Alaska, which erupted in 43 BC — the year after Julius Caesar was assassinated — could have cooled parts of southern Europe and northern
    Africa by up to 7 degrees Celsius, or 13 degrees Fahrenheit.

    Colder weather, less sunlight and shifting rainfall could affect several breadbaskets at once, including the US, China and Russia, hitting global
    food security and potentially leading to political tensions, even war, according to a recent analysis by the insurers Lloyd’s.

    Mandatory Credit: Photo by ANTON BRINK/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock (14933051a)
    Lava flows across one of the roads near Grindavik, Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland, 21 November 2024. According to the Icelandic Meteorological
    Office, a new fissure erupted in the area on 21 November 2024, spewing hot
    lava into the air. On 10 November 2023 an evacuation of the population of Grindavik was ordered after seismic activity and evidence of significant
    magma movement occurred in the area.
    Volcano eruption near Grindavik, Iceland - 21 Nov 2024

    INTERACTIVE STORY
    Why these scientists are planning to drill directly into a pocket of
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    The human and economic toll would be vast. In an extreme scenario, similar
    to Tambora, economic losses could reach more than $3.6 trillion in the
    first year alone, Lloyd’s calculated.

    What’s more, the cooling would offer no relief from climate change; within
    a few years, the planet would return to how it was before.

    The next eruption could happen anywhere. There are areas scientists are watching, including Indonesia, one of the planet’s most volcanically
    active regions, and Yellowstone, in Western US, which hasn’t experienced a
    huge eruption for hundreds of thousands of years.

    “But which one next and when — that’s still impossible to predict,”
    Stoffel said.

    Massive volcanic eruptions cannot be prevented, but there are ways to
    prepare, Stoffel added. He called for experts to assess worst-case
    scenarios, run stress tests and come up with plans: everything from
    evacuations to aid efforts and securing food supplies.

    While some might say the probability of a massive eruption is still small, “it’s really not nothing,” Stoffel said, and currently the world is
    unprepared for impacts it would unleash. “We’re just at the beginning of getting an idea of what could happen.”

    https://edition.cnn.com/2024/12/24/climate/massive-volcano-eruption- climate/index.html

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  • From Siri Cruise@21:1/5 to useapen on Sun Dec 29 02:53:27 2024
    XPost: talk.environment, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.global-warming

    useapen wrote:
    Many volcanoes have erupted since, but Tambora remains the planet’s most recent massive eruption. More than 200 years later, scientists warn the
    world may be due another.


    We do not get big eruptions every year. When we do it gets really
    bad, such as the Permian Extinction.

    On very rare occasions the mantle buggers the crust.

    Day after day it is not the mantle but humans that bugger the
    biosphere.

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  • From Bill Pfister@21:1/5 to Siri Cruise on Mon Dec 30 11:24:01 2024
    XPost: talk.environment, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.global-warming

    On 12/29/2024 2:53 AM, Siri Cruise wrote:
    useapen wrote:
    Many volcanoes have erupted since, but Tambora remains the planet’s most >> recent massive eruption. More than 200 years later, scientists warn the
    world may be due another.


    We do not get big eruptions every year. When we do it gets really bad,
    such as the Permian Extinction.

    On very rare occasions the mantle buggers the crust.

    Day after day it is not the mantle but humans that bugger the biosphere.

    Volcanic eruptions occur every day.

    Overall, 44 volcanoes were in continuing eruption status as of 23
    December 2024. An eruption marked as "continuing" does not always mean persistent daily activity, but indicates at least intermittent eruptive
    events without a break of 3 months or more. There are typically 40-50 continuing eruptions, and out of those generally around 20 will be
    actively erupting on any particular day (though we do not keep detailed statistics on daily activity). Additional annual eruption data is
    available for recent years.

    https://volcano.si.edu/gvp_currenteruptions.cfm

    https://www.nps.gov/havo/learn/photosmultimedia/webcams.htm

    You might consider that the biosphere is the least of your worries as a
    human.

    The greatest problem facing humans these days is the diminished supply
    of potable water thanks to unfettered fracking and poisoning of ground
    water.

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