Author: Dr. Marcus Thornfield, Volcanologist and Geophysical Researcher
Volcanoes
Santorini doesn’t apologize for anything. The Greek island sits in the Aegean like a shattered crown, its cliffs plunging 300 meters into waters
Volcanoes
Mount Nyiragongo’s lava lake glows like a furious eye in the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of only eight persistent lava lakes on Earth. But here’
Volcanoes
Copper. Gold. Silver. Zinc. The stuff that makes our phones buzz and our economies hum. Ever wonder where it all comes from? Turns out, a lot of it comes
Volcanoes
Diagrams in textbooks make volcanoes look neat and organized—labeled cross-sections with clearly defined parts like an exploded view of a machine.
Volcanoes
The last thing you want while snapping Instagram photos at a volcanic crater is to become part of the geological record yourself. Yet every year, tourists
Volcanoes
Yellowstone. Toba. Taupo. These names don’t just sit on maps—they lurk in the collective nightmare of anyone who’s spent too much time reading
Volcanoes
Imagine standing on a mountainside when suddenly the entire slope above you transforms into a 700-degree Celsius avalanche traveling at 450 miles per hour. That’
Volcanoes
Plato was either history’s greatest storyteller or its most elaborate prankster. Around 360 BCE, he casually drops this story about Atlantis—a civilization
Volcanoes
The internet, if we’re being honest, is a carnival of half-truths, motivated reasoning, and people who think their aunt’s Facebook post counts
Volcanoes
Scientists climb active volcanoes with gas masks and titanium tubes, essentially playing chicken with Earth’s furnace vents. They’
