can we please gtfo of this planet and have some kind of backup. We are here sitting thinking we are immune to mass extinction events either causes by asteroids, volcanoes or wandering undetected black holes, when we are clearly not. Its happened many times before and absolutely will happen again.
The worst part is that this can happen ANY DAY NOW.
If this blows, we are fucked...it's not like the movies where we have a "plan" we are straight up fucked.
How much warning will we have before it erupts? Will there be a week or two where we can detect signs of imminent eruption and stockpile drugs and alcohol?
How much warning will we have before it erupts? Will there be a week or two where we can detect signs of imminent eruption and stockpile drugs and alcohol?
We should nuke the sky to dissipate the ash circling the globe. Then Fallout.
Yeah fucking scientists, get on your damn jobs and fix this!time to put some scientist on a solution to filter the air from ash quick.
Yeah fucking scientists, get on your damn jobs and fix this!
Yeah fucking scientists, get on your damn jobs and fix this!
If the ash cloud covers most of the world for about 2 years (and it might well do) then pretty much everything green will die, then regrow from seeds once the sun comes back. That'll destroy the food chain and probably eradicate upwards of 90% of life on the planet.
Humans are extremely adaptable, but we'd need to know about this years in advance to plan for it. If we had the time, I suppose you could build up enough tinned food supplies for everyone to last that time, but with all the energy networks down and the weather being far colder than normal, some people will, unfortunately, be fucked. Merry Christmas
Is it on YT?I'm watching a documentary on this, and they say the first signs would show a month before eruption.
There's probably no volcano. I have a feeling all of this is being made up somehow.
So this could potentially cause an Ice Age, right?
what next we find out america was built over a haunted Indian burial ground?
The worst part is that this can happen ANY DAY NOW.
You also don't believe in masturbation or abortion, though.
This is different.
They've been working on something for years underneath there. Think about if, all that government land and they're just using it as a park? No way. They're definitely testing something underground and are preemptively warning us should something go wrong.
If the ash cloud covers most of the world for about 2 years (and it might well do) then pretty much everything green will die, then regrow from seeds once the sun comes back. That'll destroy the food chain and probably eradicate upwards of 90% of life on the planet.
Humans are extremely adaptable, but we'd need to know about this years in advance to plan for it. If we had the time, I suppose you could build up enough tinned food supplies for everyone to last that time, but with all the energy networks down and the weather being far colder than normal, some people will, unfortunately, be fucked. Merry Christmas
I've done the math. They'll only last me 2 months at best.We still could eat our neighbours.
If the ash cloud covers most of the world for about 2 years (and it might well do) then pretty much everything green will die, then regrow from seeds once the sun comes back. That'll destroy the food chain and probably eradicate upwards of 90% of life on the planet.
Humans are extremely adaptable, but we'd need to know about this years in advance to plan for it. If we had the time, I suppose you could build up enough tinned food supplies for everyone to last that time, but with all the energy networks down and the weather being far colder than normal, some people will, unfortunately, be fucked. Merry Christmas
WAIT. Can't we just nuke the volcano? I'm sure that will kill it.
Proto-humans were alive when this volcano errupted the last time. if it didn't wipe them out, it won't wipe us out. Hell, most species on earth would have been around 630k years ago. Life would be find in the long run. Things would just suck for awhile.
abstract of paper Future volcanism at Yellowstone caldera: Insights from geochemistry of young volcanic units and monitoring of volcanic unrest by Guillaume Girard said:In order to understand possible future scenarios of intracaldera volcanism at Yellowstone, we provide new insights on the generation and eruption of the youngest intracaldera rhyolitic magmas using quartz petrography, geochemistry, and geobarometry. We propose that magma ascent occurred rapidly from the source regions at 810 km to the surface along major regional faults, without storage at shallower depths. These source regions coincide with the upper parts of the present-day imaged magma chamber, while the faults focus much of the present-day caldera unrest. Based on these combined observations, we propose that volcanism has a higher probability to resume in three fault-controlled NNW-trending lineaments, the first coinciding with the western caldera rim, the second lying across the central region of the caldera, and the third extending across the northeastern caldera. The first two lineaments focused recent intracaldera volcanism (17470 ka), while the latter is the most active in terms of current caldera unrest. Future volcanism could include large-volume lava flows and phreato-magmatic rhyolitic eruptions. The identification of these three regions together with potentially rapid eruptive mechanisms may help to better define future monitoring efforts necessary to improve eruption forecasting in this vast area of volcanic unrest
NYC is safe : )
With enough warning, the states near Yellowstone could be evacuated, which would largely avoid a tremendous loss of life caused by the downpour of ash, the scientists said. But that's just in the short term; the aftermath would be the rub. For several days, ash would hang in the air, making it difficult to breathe. And that blanket of ash covering the country would smother vegetation and pollute the water supply, quickly leading to a nationwide food crisis. "A lot of people would perish," said Stephen Self, director of the Volcano Dynamics Group at the Open University in the U.K. He envisions American refugees lining up at the Mexican border. [5 Ways the World will Radically Change This Century]
Perhaps foreign governments would come to our aid and embark on a major ash cleanup operation, but without such an effort, inhospitable conditions would persist in the midwestern U.S. for about a decade. "The records show that [new] vegetation starts to take hold about 10 years after supereruptions. It depends on how much rainfall the area receives, as rainfall is the main way you clear ash off the land," Self said.
As for the rest of the world, it would face a few years of mild climate change caused by the supereruption's ash cloud, which would wrap around the globe, casting Earth in shadow for several days and altering the chemical composition of the atmosphere for a decade or so. However, recent research shows the global impacts of supervolcanoes are less severe than scientists once thought, and a Yellowstone supereruption might be especially unimposing because its magma contains minimal sulfur. Sulfur gas produces particles called aerosols, which can cool the climate by blocking sunlight.
http://www.livescience.com/20714-yellowstone-supervolcano-eruption.html
i don't get all this pseudo-scientific fear mongering comes from, watch less docudramas.
"The ash is thick (more than about 30 centimeters of ash) near the eruption source and a small fraction of a millimeter once you move 2,000 miles away. It's fair to say that a trace of ash would be found over most of the United States, though it would only be thick enough to collapse roofs in the states closest to Yellowstone," Lowenstern told Life's Little Mysteries.
east coast = best coast
Wouldn't that be outdated now?