『Volcanic Unrest and Major Earthquake Shake Up US Geologic Landscape』のカバーアート

Volcanic Unrest and Major Earthquake Shake Up US Geologic Landscape

Volcanic Unrest and Major Earthquake Shake Up US Geologic Landscape

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In the past week, geological activity in the United States has centered on volcanic unrest and a major earthquake, highlighting ongoing hazards in volcanic hotspots and tectonically active regions. Kilauea volcano on Hawaii's Big Island continues its summit eruption, which began last December and remains active. U.S. Geological Survey reports from December 13 indicate the eruption paused after episode 38, with models forecasting episode 39 between December 22 and 27. Precursory lava overflows could start anytime from vents in Halemaumau crater, where inflation rates and gas pistoning signal building pressure. On December 2, observatory overflights captured spattering lava deep in the north vent, surrounded by yellow native sulfur deposits formed from reacting volcanic gases. The volcano alert level stays at watch, with east rift zone emissions low.

Across the Pacific in Alaska, Great Sitkin volcano on the Aleutian Islands maintains its continuing eruption, as detailed in Volcano Discovery's December 12 update. Low-level explosive and effusive activity persists, producing ash plumes and lava flows, consistent with patterns at this remote hotspot volcano since 2021.

Yellowstone Volcano Observatory's December update contrasts these events with the Yellowstone Caldera system's normal background activity. November saw 251 earthquakes, the largest magnitude 3.2, amid slight subsidence and diminished Steamboat Geyser activity. Both Kilauea and Yellowstone stem from fixed hotspots driving magma plumes, but oceanic crust in Hawaii allows fluid basaltic eruptions, while thick continental crust at Yellowstone favors explosive rhyolitic events.

A significant seismic event struck on December 6, when a magnitude 7.0 oblique-slip earthquake hit 6 miles below Hubbard Glacier in Alaska's St. Elias Mountains, 55 miles north of Yakutat. U.S. Geological Survey notes it triggered landslides and snow avalanches, underscoring risks in glaciated terrains prone to rapid mass wasting.

Emerging patterns reveal steady unrest at U.S. hotspots, with Kilauea episodes accelerating and Alaska facing compounded volcanic-seismic threats. Globally, 44 volcanoes show continuing eruptions per the Smithsonian USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report ending December 9, but U.S. sites dominate recent domestic headlines, emphasizing vigilant monitoring amid climate-influenced glacier dynamics and mineral resource shifts like the USGS expanded 2025 critical minerals list including uranium and metallurgical coal.

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