Volcanoes
Volcanoes
Iceland sits on a geological wound that refuses to heal—a crack between continents where the planet’s guts spill out with alarming regularity.
Volcanoes
Mauna Loa doesn’t erupt so much as exhale—a slow, persistent ooze of molten rock that’s been reshaping Hawaii’s Big Island for somewhere
Volcanoes
Mount Unzen in Japan, 1991. A lava dome swelled like some monstrous geological pimple for months—then collapsed. Forty-three people died in the pyroclastic
Volcanoes
Calling this a “beginner’s guide” feels dishonest because honestly? Nobody’s really a beginner when it comes to volcanoes. You’
Volcanoes
Mount Pelée killed 30,000 people in roughly two minutes on May 8, 1902. The pyroclastic flow that obliterated Saint-Pierre, Martinique, traveled at somewhere
Volcanoes
There’s this place in Wyoming where the ground breathes. Not metaphorically—actually rises and falls, sometimes by several inches a year, like the
Volcanoes
You know what’s wild? We spend so much time worrying about lava—that glowing, photogenic destroyer of civilizations—that we’
Volcanoes
Somewhere on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, something erupts. Not lava—not the kind that would melt your face off, anyway. Ice. Slush.
Volcanoes
A hexacopter drone wobbles through sulfuric clouds above Marum crater in Vanuatu, its camera capturing footage of a lava lake churning 1,200 feet below.
Volcanoes
Plate tectonics and volcanism are so intertwined that talking about one without the other is pointless. Volcanoes exist because plates move.
