Author: Dr. Marcus Thornfield, Volcanologist and Geophysical Researcher
Volcanoes
June 8, 1783. A fissure 27 kilometers long ripped open in Iceland’s southeastern highlands, and what followed wasn’t your typical volcanic
Volcanoes
August 27, 1883. The island of Krakatoa, squatting in the Sunda Strait between Java and Sumatra, decided it had had enough of existing in its current form.
Volcanoes
Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines spent three weeks hiccupping before it finally exploded in June 1991, ejecting ten billion tons of magma into the stratosphere. Those hiccups?
Volcanoes
Iceland’s Reykjanes Peninsula just won’t quit. After sitting dormant for 800 years, it’s now on its fifth eruption since 2021, and locals
Volcanoes
The Novarupta eruption of 1912 was so violently absurd that it buried an entire valley under 700 feet of ash in less than 60 hours. Now that same moonscape—the
Volcanoes
Calling volcanoes “architects” is generous considering they mostly destroy things. But over geological time, the destruction builds something
Volcanoes
Picture a blowtorch aimed at the underside of Earth’s crust, held there for millions of years. That’s essentially what a mantle plume is—a
Volcanoes
Kawah Ijen in Indonesia spits blue flames at night. Not metaphorically blue—actually blue, like someone set a gas stove on fire inside a crater lake with
Volcanoes
Kilauea’s 2018 eruption buried 13.7 square miles of Hawaii’s Big Island under molten rock that could melt copper. The lava cooled into a lifeless
Volcanoes
Mount Vesuvius sits there like a sleeping giant with a criminal record, looming over Naples with roughly 3 million people living in its shadow.
