Trrible:La palma volcano`s New New LAVA stream At High speed threatens to devour the church La Palma

Описание к видео Trrible:La palma volcano`s New New LAVA stream At High speed threatens to devour the church La Palma

Cornell researchers have unearthed precise, microscopic clues to where magma is stored, offering scientists and government officials in populated areas a way to better assess the risk of volcanic eruptions.In recent years, scientists have used satellite imagery, earthquake data and GPS to search for ground deformation near active volcanoes, but those techniques can be inaccurate in locating the depth of magma storage. By finding microscopic, carbon dioxide-rich fluids encased in cooled volcanic crystals, scientists can determine accurately, within one hundred meters, where magma is located...
A fundamental question is where magma is stored in Earth’s crust and mantle,said lead author Esteban Gazel, the Charles N. Mellowes Professor in Engineering, in Cornell Engineering. That location matters because you can gauge the risk of an eruption by pinpointing the specific location of magma, instead of other signals like hydrothermal system of a volcano.Gazel said speed and precision are essential. We’re demonstrating the enormous potential of this improved technique in terms of its rapidity and unprecedented accuracy,he said. We can produce data within days of the samples arriving from a site, which provides better, near real-time results...

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