Bryan Walsh, an author of the book “End Times,” wrote that there are 20 supervolcanoes on Earth that represent the greatest threat to human life.
The Yellowstone one, he noted, has erupted three times in the past 2.1 million years, and the last one was about 640,000 years ago.
He theorized what would happen should the caldera erupt.
“First would come increasingly intense earthquakes, a sign that magma beneath Yellowstone was rushing toward the surface. Then magma would burst through the ground in a titanic eruption, discharging the toxic innards of the earth to the air. It would continue for days, burying Yellowstone in lava within a 40-mile radius,” Walsh said in the NY Times.
The “supereruption” would bury Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado in several feet of toxic volcanic ash. Likely, the ash would spread to the Midwest, he said.
“Crops would be destroyed; pastureland would be contaminated. Power lines and electrical transformers would be ruined, potentially knocking out much of the grid,” Walsh said.
But the effects would be felt across the world.
“Modeling by meteorologists has found that the aerosols released could spread globally if the eruption occurred during the summer. Over the short term, as the toxic cloud blocked sunlight, global average temperatures could plunge significantly—and not return to normal for several years. Rainfall would decline sharply,” he said.
He said the supervolcano, and others like it, represent an “ultra-catastrophe” that would lead to human extinction. Biological warfare and asteroids are other examples.
“There will probably never be a year in which no one dies in an aviation accident, but there will definitely never be a year in which 10 percent of the global population dies in a single plane crash,” Walsh wrote, adding that the government should allocate resources to volcano hazard programs.
Walsh closed the piece in saying that humans have the power to prevent such disasters.
New Thermal Activity
Scientists said they have discovered new thermal activity in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming that is about the size of four football fields.He uses satellites to track thermal areas that measure heat being emitted from the ground.
“These sorts of changes are part of the normal life cycles of thermal areas in Yellowstone National Park,” it added in a blog post earlier this month.
More than 10,000 thermal features are located within the park.
Michael Poland, the researcher in charge of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, has often had to debunk articles saying the Yellowstone caldera, or “supervolcano,” is about to erupt. He told the newspaper that the appearance of a new thermal area isn’t something to worry about, noting that thermal areas appear and disappear in the park.