A Google
Earth view showing Vermont, New Hampshire and Massachusetts, under which an
unexpected large blob of molten magma has been detected. (Credit: Google Earth,
News.com.au)
Something
unexpected has been gradually making itself known to geologists in the United
States. A huge mass of molten rock is creeping upwards beneath the nation’s
north eastern states.
“The
upwelling we detected is like a hot-air balloon, and we infer that something is
rising up through the deeper part of our planet under New England,” says Rutgers
University geophysicist Professor Vadim Levin.
Traces of
the brooding mass only became evident through a large-scale new seismic study.
The idea
that there may be a super volcano brewing under Massachusetts, Vermont and New
Hampshire is something of a surprise.
“Our study
challenges the established notion of how the continents on which we live
behave,” Professor Levin says. “It challenges the textbook concepts taught in
introductory geology classes.”
The region
is geologically stable. There are no active volcanoes.
So the
massive magma build-up must be a relatively recent event.
But, in the
timescale of Earth’s geological processes, this still means tens of millions of
years.
“It will
likely take millions of years for the upwelling to get where it’s going,”
Professor Levin explains. “The next step is to try to understand how exactly
it’s happening.”
Something
strange had been noted about the region earlier. Somewhere down there was an
anomaly hundreds of degrees Celsius hotter than its surroundings.
The new
study has helped identify the molten blob as being centred under Vermont, with
parts of western New Hampshire and western Massachusets also within its
embrace.
“It is not
Yellowstone-like, but it’s a distant relative,” Professor Levin says.
As to whether-or-not
the magma bubble will eventually eek its way to the surface is unknown.
“Maybe it
didn’t have time yet, or maybe it is too small and will never make it,”
Professor Levin told National Geographic.
“Come back
in 50 million years, and we’ll see what happens.”
This story
originally appeared in news.com.au.
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