Experts declare alert: Supervised Yellowstone will soon 'explode'

Experts declare alert: Supervised Yellowstone will soon 'explode'

The scientists warned that the supervulant in Yellowstone will soon erupt after a record number of small earthquakes recorded in the last three months

The 25,000 earthquake that struck Yellowstone from June 12 to today is the longest period of its kind ever in the history of the United States, according to Newsweek. Experts from the State Geological Survey said it was "fascinating" to follow the swarm and find out more about it, they told Newsweek. A total of 115 earthquakes were recorded in the park in September through monthly updates to the Yellowstone surveillance activities. Of that, 78 earthquakes were part of a swarm in the northwestern part of Yellowstone. The highest intensity of the earthquake was magnitude 2.3 in September.


"Including events from the previous three monthly reports that began on June 12, total swarms of seismicity include: one quake magnitude 4.4, 12 earthquakes in magnitude 3 and 185 earthquake magnitudes 2," it is said. About half of the seismic activity in Yellowstone was a swarm of earthquakes that occurred over several weeks or months without a clear sequence, unlike traditional earthquakes where the main earthquake occurs, followed by a series of smaller earthquakes.

The head of the USGS Yellowstone Observatory, a scientist, Mike Poland, told Newsweek that it was "a bit too early" to say that the earthquake was over, Stuff.co.nz writes. "But the activity has definitely dropped drastically since August, and the earthquake is shrinking if it is not and completely finished. It will probably take time until it is announced that it is "over." The actual number of earthquakes is difficult to determine because the earthquakes can overlap or are too small to be tracked, he said. The boiling point below the place where famous geysers originate, reached a "critical boundary."

If it is exceeded, there will not be a direct and indirect threat to the part of the US area. The catastrophe threatens the entire world due to the impact of "volcanic winters". Whatever happened, Yellowstone throws a large amount of steam and smoke into the atmosphere. His most famous geyser is a lot of "rocks" and "coughs", which experts consider as a safe sign that inside it grows temperature and pressure. And it can end with a powerful explosion, reports fakti.org.

Some eyewitnesses claim that the Yellowstone national park forms a pressure that can "blow up" everything that keeps supervisor for a while now. Bizoni on their own hand - just in case - are evacuated from the most famous American national park ...