Saturday, October 31, 2015

Scientists say MASSIVE crack in the earth is Yellowstone is NO sign of volcanic eruption.

Scientists say MASSIVE crack in the earth in Yellowstone is NO sign of volcanic eruption.

If you believe that, I have this new bridge with rusty metal pins in San Francisco Bay, I can sell you. - TGFP.


By Sandy Fitzgerald   |   Saturday, 31 Oct 2015 01:17 PM

A huge crack that has formed in the foothills of Wyoming's Bighorn Mountains is not a sign that Yellowstone's massive underground volcano is about to erupt, or anything else more sinister: It's just something that opened naturally, scientists are saying.

The crack measures 750 yards long and 50 yards wide, reports Mother Nature Network, and was discovered by backcountry hunters who were out hunting for game, not geological mysteries.

The chasm was first reported by SNS Outfitter & Guides, a hunting company, on its Facebook page earlier this week and after that, the news — and the conspiracy theories — have been growing:




This giant crack in the earth appeared in the last two weeks on a ranch we hunt in the Bighorn Mountains. Everyone here is calling it “the gash”. It’s a really incredible sight.
Huntwyo.com

But as it turns out, the crack isn't related to the Yellowstone supervolcano, or anything worse, despite the claims swirling around online about it.

"Apparently, a wet spring lubricated across a cap rock," an engineer has told SNS. "Then, a small spring on either side caused the bottom to slide out. He estimated 15 to 20 million yards of movement."

The region has been, through the years, the site of several such landslides, although not nearly the size of the recently discovered chasm, which lies not far from the Yellowstone Caldera.

Episodic volcanic eruptions have occurred in the Yellowstone area — three of them major.

The Yellowstone Caldera itself was created by a massive volcanic eruption approximately 640,000 years ago, and Yellowstone Park itself sits squarely atop one of the biggest volcanoes on Earth, according to National Geographic

Scientists believe that some kind of eruption at Yellowstone is possible, but the odds of a "supervolcano" that could "plunge the Earth into a volcanic winter — are anyone's guess; it could happen in our lifetimes, or 100,000 years or more from now, or perhaps never," the publicacation continues.

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