Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles is a weekly column written by scientists and collaborators of the Yellowstone Volcano ...
Geologists found a deep-running network of magma channels in the northeast corner of Yellowstone National Park.
Ranger naturalist George D. Marler monitoring of changes in hydrothermal activity in Yellowstone was useful in understanding ...
A detailed look at Yellowstone's magma storage system finds that only one region is likely to host liquid magma in the long term.
An expert from the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory has revealed some of the most likely impacts of an eruption in the famed ...
The giant supervolcano that lies under Yellowstone National Park is cooling off in the west but staying hot in the northeast.
Axial Seamount is a young, 30 million-year-old undersea volcano in the Pacific Ocean off the U.S. coast, and it’s expected to ...
When Yellowstone erupts again ... This crater-like divot in the rock isn't fed by a narrow vent like typical volcanoes. Instead, a large magma pool sits right below a shallow surface rock layer.
Large explosive eruptions occur in Yellowstone around once every 700,000 years, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
The greatest supervolcano on Earth, a geological giant with enormous destructive potential and an unmatched promise for civilisation, is located deep under the gorgeous Yellowstone National Park.
Deep within the Yellowstone Caldera, the bowl-shaped rock cauldron at the heart of Yellowstone National Park, there’s a clue ...