Slashdot Mirror


Oregon Is Growing A Mystery Bulge

nedwolf writes "LiveScience is reporting that a 100 square mile bulge has been rising in Oregon. First observed from a satellite using a relatively new technology called 'radar interferometry', some believe this to be the formation of a new volcano. I think it's just happy to see me."

6 of 420 comments (clear)

  1. Baby Sister? by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Informative
    Looks quiet now.

    To put things into perspective here's recent quakes throught the US, notice the activity in the state of California, to the south.

    Back in the late 90's there were swarms of minor earthquakes around the Long Valley Caldera, the vicinity of California where Mammoth Lakes and Mammoth Mountain are located. Swarms of earth quakes, 4.0 (Richter) and lower, most lower than 2.0, were up to 600 per 24 hours for a period of about two weeks, and ground elevations were observed changing (similarly to those in Oregon) slightly, but as you can see all is quiet and nothing happened. Long Valley is the caldera of a very large, dormant volcano.

    Here is a good example of a swarm of aftershocks.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  2. This would be a shield volcano by ReformedExCon · · Score: 5, Informative

    A shield volcano is formed when a large pool of magma forms and pushes the land above it upwards. These types are not likely to erupt, though they will erupt violently if the magma is able to push through the surface (kind of like a giant geologic pimple). These volcanos are great for tourism because of the typically accompanying hot springs and year-round greenery.

    I like Oregon a lot. I just wish it were easier to get to.

    --
    Jesus saved me from my past. He can save you as well.
    1. Re:This would be a shield volcano by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Volcano lesson for the day:
      This is not a shield volcano.

      A shield volcano is actually made by layers and layers of basaltic magma. Hawaii (the large, flat volcanos) are shield volcanos. Basaltic magma is very hot, iron rich, and flows easily. It tends to bubble and gurgle, not explode. There's a reason hawaiian eruptions don't produce ash clouds - no big explosion.

      http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/Shiel dVolcano.html

      In Oregon, we have very few shield volcanos. Most of ours are composite volcanos (made from lava pusing up a dome, plus layers of flowing ash) and cinder cones (made from piles of ejected cinders). Our magmas are rhyolitic, meaning they contain little iron, it is at relatively cooler temperatures, and tend to explode violently (like Mount St. Helens or the famous Mount Mazama... now crater lake).

      http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/StratoVolcano/d escription_composite_volcano.html

  3. Re:Same fault line by geomon · · Score: 5, Informative

    both regions lie along the same fault line.

    No. Both regions sit atop the seismically active area named "The Ring Of Fire", which is a poetic name given to a seismically active rim boundary indicated by plots of earthquake epicenter. The purple band you see on the map is the area is the subduction zone of the Pacific Plate.

    This is not a fault zone. Fault zones arise in response to subduction.

    --
    "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
  4. Re:New measurement technique != new geology by Scarblac · · Score: 5, Informative

    They are now able to detect this swelling...how do we know it isn't normal.

    We don't, of course. The bit below is from a mysterious item usually related to as "the fucking article", bolding mine:

    The likely cause of the bulge is a pool of magma that, according to Deschutes National Forest geologist Larry Chitwood, is equal in size to a lake 1 mile across and 65 feet deep.
    The magma lake is rising 10 feet each year, under tremendous pressure, and it deforms the Earth's surface as it expands, causing the bulge.
    Other causes could be anything from the birth of a new volcano -- a fourth Sister in the making -- to a routine and anticlimactic pooling of liquid rock, researchers say.
    "The honest and shortest answer is, we don't know,'' said Dan Dzurisin, a USGS geologist.
    --
    I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
  5. Re:Same fault line by keraneuology · · Score: 5, Informative
    This is not a fault zone. Fault zones arise in response to subduction.

    Not always. San Andreas is a transform fault - no subduction involved. See http://jersey.uoregon.edu/~mstrick/AskGeoMan/geoQu erry22.html

    --
    If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"