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Magma Cap Discovery: A “breathing” cap of magma has been found inside the Yellowstone supervolcano. This could help scientists predict future eruptions.
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Location: Yellowstone supervolcano is located beneath Yellowstone National Park in the western United States.
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Size & Type: It’s one of the world’s largest active volcanic systems, characterized as a caldera (a large crater) and an active supervolcano. The caldera is 55 x 72 km (34 x 45 miles) in size.
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Formation: The caldera formed from the collapse of land after massive pyroclastic eruptions emptied the magma chamber beneath.
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Past Eruptions: Yellowstone has had three major eruptions: 2.1 million, 1.3 million, and 640,000 years ago. Two of these qualify it as a supervolcano.
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Supervolcano Definition: A supervolcano is defined by eruptions of more than 1,000 cubic kilometers of deposits.
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Potential Impact: A future supereruption could blanket North America in ash, with areas near the volcano potentially covered by over a meter of debris.
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Climate Effects: Supervolcanoes can cause global cooling for several years due to sulfur dioxide released into the atmosphere, which blocks sunlight.