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Video: Extreme weather, fireballs and UFOs of November, 2013

As the title indicates, so far this month, we've seen more extreme weather, more sinkholes, a volcano erupting that had been dormant for 400 years, more fireballs, UFOs and strange 'sky' sounds. They're all definitely signs of the times!


Bizarro Earth

Active volcano discovered under Antarctic ice sheet - can volcanoes be causing Antarctic ice loss?

Mount Sidley
© Doug WiensMount Sidley is the youngest volcano rising above the ice in West Antarctica's Executive Committee Range. A group of seismologists has detected new volcanic activity under the ice about 30 miles ahead of Mount Sidley.
Earthquakes deep below West Antarctica reveal an active volcano hidden beneath the massive ice sheet, researchers said today (Nov. 17) in a study published in the journal Nature Geoscience.

The discovery finally confirms long-held suspicions of volcanic activity concealed by the vast West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Several volcanoes poke up along the Antarctic coast and its offshore islands, such as Mount Erebus, but this is the first time anyone has caught magma in action far from the coast.

"This is really the golden age of discovery of the Antarctic continent," said Richard Aster, a co-author of the study and a seismologist at Colorado State University. "I think there's no question that there are more volcanic surprises beneath the ice."

The volcano was a lucky find. The research project, called POLENET, was intended to reveal the structure of Earth's mantle, the layer beneath the crust.

In 2010, a team led by scientists from Washington University in St. Louis spent weeks slogging across the snow, pulling sleds laden with earthquake-monitoring equipment.

Hardhat

She's smoking! Mount Etna puffs out dozens of rings measuring hundreds of feet across as she spews molten lava

  • The volcano in Sicily erupted violently on November 11 and has created hundreds of smoke rings that travelled east
  • Volcanologist Dr Tom Pfeiffer, who photographed the phenomenon, believes they were produced by a circular vent
  • It is not the first time Etna has managed to produce the smoky halos
Volatile volcano Mount Etna has been blowing perfect 'smoke' rings into Sicily's blue skies.

The volcano erupted violently on November 11 and since then has produced regular explosions, as well as hundreds of perfect vortex rings.

While theories abound, scientists are not entirely sure why the volcano is able to blow the circular puffs of steam - although some think a circular vent could be the cause.

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Volatile volcano Mount Etna has been blowing perfect smoke rings after erupting violently on November 11 and has since produced regular explosions, as well as dozens of perfect vortex rings


Bizarro Earth

Dangerous new eruption at Sumatra's Sinabung volcano

Mount Sinabung
© TJUKTJUK/ShutterstockA photo of Mount Sinabung in North Sumatra, Indonesia, before its latest eruption forced thousands of nearby residents to flee.
Superheated ash and gas flowing down the slopes of Indonesia's Sinabung volcano signals the intensity of eruptions may be increasing at the fiery mountain, according to local officials.

More than 5,000 people have been evacuated from towns and villages in North Sumatra's Karo Regency since Mount Sinabung awoke in October after a three-year dormancy. Karo is an agricultural region that supplies vegetables for surrounding islands.

The evacuation and devastating ash fall have affected crop harvests, leading to higher prices on vegetables and chilies elsewhere in Indonesia, according to the Jakarta Post.

The Indonesian Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation warned people not to approach within 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) of Mount Sinabung.

On Monday (Nov. 11), a pyroclastic flow, a fast-moving avalanche of ash, lava fragments and air, was seen racing down the peak. Since then, the volcano has blasted out one to two ash explosions every day. Lava has flowed more than 1,000 meters (3,200 feet) from the top of the volcano.

Bizarro Earth

Indonesia's Mount Sinabung erupts for 3rd time, evacuations ordered

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According to reports by the officials, a volcano erupted for the third time on the western Indonesian island of Sumatra. This eruption caused the evacuation of many villagers living near the affected place. Mount Sinabung ejected a 7-km (4.3-mile) column of ash into the air, which prompted the concerned authorities to compel the people living within the 3-km radius to evacuate their places immediately.

According to sources, the military helped to evacuate about 1,293 people from four villages, surrounding the volcano. It has also been revealed by the sources that in the month of September about 14,000 people were forcibly evacuated, after the recognition of the activity signs of the volcano.

Sinabung is the world's fourth most populated country and it comprises of nearly 130 active volcanoes. These volcanoes in Sinabung straddle the "Pacific Ring of Fire".

Bizarro Earth

Supervolcanoes found in Maine? (Yes, Maine)

Maine has supervolcanoes. Wait, Maine has volcanoes? Yes, and their eruptions could have been among the biggest ever on Earth, geoscientist Sheila Seaman reported here Tuesday (Oct. 29) at the Geological Society of America's annual meeting.

"Long before there were these things called supervolcanoes, we've known about giant, big, horrific silicic volcanic eruptions," said Seaman, of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. The most massive of these blasts in recent history was Toba, which blew up an island in Indonesia 2.5 million years ago. The explosion heaved 700 cubic miles (2,800 cubic kilometers) of magma out of the Earth's crust.Around 420 million years ago, a series of super-eruptions dropped thick piles of ash and lava fragments along the proto-East Coast. There are at least four volcanoes spread out along 100 miles (160 km) of Maine's coast, Seaman said.
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© Edwin ChaseMount Desert Island in Maine's Acadia National Park as seen from across the Mount Desert Narrows.
The huge volcanic rock piles are consistent with caldera-forming eruptions, Seaman said. These explosions empty a magma chamber, leaving a gaping wound in the Earth - think Yellowstone National Park, or the San Juan volcanic field in Colorado.

Since they formed, the ancient volcanic layers have been tilted up by tectonic forces, providing a top-to-bottom slice through a supervolcano. For example, Isle au Haut, part of Acadia National Park, exposes the heart of a volcano. "The whole magma chamber is lying on its side," Seaman said.

Bizarro Earth

Zhupanovsky volcano erupts in Russia - last erupted in 1959


A new eruption started this week at the Zhupanovsky volcano, about 70 km northeast of the capital of Kamchatka, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, which last erupted in 1959. It is a complex volcano composed of several overlapping cones aligned on a roughly east-west oriented axis. The new eruption comes from the same vent that has been also the site of all known historical eruptions, located west of the highest point of the volcanic massif.

Attention

Is this the world's oldest warning sign? 9,000-year-old wall painting of volcano tells people of nearby danger

In a play on the old adage 'if walls could talk', a mural has been discovered that could be the world's earliest warning sign.
The 9,000-year-old painting, found on a wall buried in the ancient Turkish settlement of Catalhoyuk, shows a village in front of an erupting volcano. Researchers now believe, through the use of mineral dating and geochemical tests, that the volcano shown in the painting is the nearby Mount Hasan, found 70 miles from the settlement site.

It is thought the mural was painted to warn about the dangers of this stratovolcano, yet it may also have been the first landscape painting or even the first news report.
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A mural, pictured, found on a wall in the Turkish settlement of Catalhoyuk depicts a village in front of a volcano. The painting is thought to be a warning about the danger of nearby stratovolcano Mount Hasan, located 70 miles northeast from where the mural was found

Bizarro Earth

Mount Etna erupts, shuts down Italian airport

Mt.Etna
© NASAAn image of Mt.Etna erupting taken from the International Space Station in 2008.

Europe's most active volcano shot sparks, flames, and ash into Italy's sky Saturday.

Mount Etna erupts relatively frequently, but the volcano has not had a major eruption since 1992. Saturday's eruption sent a wall of ash so high into the air it could be seen through most of eastern Sicily, the Associated Press reported.

The eruption just before dawn forced the Catania airport to shut down the surrounding airspace. The order was lifted only a few hours later.

No evacuations were necessary as a result of the eruption. There were not fatalities reported, a the Wall Street Journal reported.

The volcano has been famous throughout history. The ancient Greeks believed it was the home of Vulcan, the god of fire. When Mt. Etna erupted the Greeks believed it was because Vulcan was creating weapons for the the god of war, Mars, LiveScience reported.

Mount Etna also sent lava hundreds of feet into the air in January of 2011.

Bizarro Earth

Ash explosion at Indonesia's Mount Sinabung

Mount Sinabung
© YouTubeA still from a video showing the ongoing ash eruption at Indonesia's Mount Sinabung.
A powerful ash eruption shot 2 miles (3 kilometers) into the air at Indonesia's Mount Sinabung on Thursday (Oct. 24), according to news reports. There were no injuries or damage, but authorities evacuated 3,300 people living near the volcano as thick ash fell across the region. There are 29 villages within a 4-mile (6 km) radius of Mount Sinabung.

The volcano awoke last month after a three-year sleep, sparking forest fires and jetting ash and volcanic gas. The 8,530-foot-high (2,600 meter) peak is one of 120 active volcanoes in Indonesia. Mount Sinabung erupted in 2010 after a 400-year period of inactivity. More than 17,500 people were evacuated at the time.