Author: Dr. Marcus Thornfield, Volcanologist and Geophysical Researcher
Volcanoes
The 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens produced a sound so massive it literally bent the rules of how we understand noise. At 163 decibels measured 100
Volcanoes
Mount Shasta punches 14,179 feet into the Northern California sky, and if you’ve ever driven Interstate 5 through Siskiyou County, you’
Volcanoes
Fire and ash. The two things everyone associates with volcanic eruptions, even though neither term is technically accurate. There’
Volcanoes
Mount Etna doesn’t play by anyone’s rules. This Sicilian troublemaker has been erupting for roughly 500,000 years, building itself into a 10,900-foot
Volcanoes
Punalu’u Beach in Hawaii looks like someone spilled an enormous bag of charcoal across the shoreline. Which, in a sense, is exactly what happened—except
Volcanoes
Venus has pancakes. Not the breakfast kind—though honestly, that would make more planetary sense than what’s actually sitting on the surface of our
Volcanoes
Mount Tavurvur doesn’t mess around. When it decides to erupt, it does so with the subtlety of a hand grenade in a library—sudden, violent, and over
Volcanoes
The Bronze Age Minoans didn’t know they were living on a time bomb. Why would they? Santorini—back then called Thera—was paradise.
Volcanoes
Craters and calderas are both big holes in volcanoes but formed by completely different mechanisms. Confusing them is like calling a pothole and a sinkhole
Volcanoes
Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull—yes, that tongue-twister that grounded European flights in 2010—sits beneath a glacier like some kind of frozen pressure cooker.
