Please be sure to LIKE and SUBSCRIBE. You can support my educational videos by clicking on the "Thanks" button just above (right of Like button) or by going here: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8
@@adarubia1971 You *should* be able to get UA-cam to show you auto-translated auto-generated subtitles. First, turn on closed-captions using the "CC" icon. Then use the Gear icon (settings) and select "Subtitle/CC English (auto-generated)". In the menu that shows up (giving choices of "Off", "English (auto-generated)", and "Auto-translate".) Select "Auto-translate" and then select "Spanish" from the list of languages shown!
@@shawnwillsey there's no easy way to do it yet, pretty much have to do it manually since it won't translate from the auto generated subtitles. believe it's something they're beta testing right now though. but to do it in youtube studio, go to subtitles then select the video, select english as the original language and you can add spanish subtitles. then click the - right of the language you added under subtitles to edit them and that's where you can manually add them.
You said you hope we can feel your sincerity and authenticity: ya, you betcha! (from a Norske in Minnesota) I hope you can feel the sincere and authentic appreciation from your worldwide viewers, too. I never fail to think, “Wow, that’s cool!” Thanks for the excellent update today!
Nice and informative update Shaun! Really appriciate that you did not use my images, instead telling your viewers about the video and explaining your thoughts about it in details. I want to clarify one thing, we where not looking for potential eruption area with the thermal drone😅 The main goal with the thermal drone today was to capture images to visualise the heat of the new road in comparison to the lava field around it🤓
Thanks for the clarification, Isak. I did not mean to imply that was your intent but certainly some viewers watching made that assumption or at least entertained the idea. I linked your video to the description here. Thermal drone is great tool for usage as you explain here. I just hope folks don't interpret to mean more than it shows. Thanks for your great work!
Just to clarify, I wasn't implying Isak was looking for potential eruption, nor did he say anything to make me think that. It was just an odd thing, noticeable on the thermal images. I'm certainly no expert but I've always been fascinated by volcanoes so I've been watching and learning about whats been happening in Iceland since it made news here in the Uk when poor Grindavik was quaking. I can't wait for the next eruption...but saying that, I'm not some sicko and hope that it won't cause any damage to human life, Blue Lagoon, the roads and infrastructure, Svartsengi power plant or Grindavik. I only wish these were safe enough to be tourist eruptions, like Fagradalsfjall....because I've saved and now I could actually fly out there 😂. I'd love to visit Iceland all because of everyone's fascinating footage recently. Thanks guys ❤
Thank you, Shawn, for jumping in, taking more of your precious time, with this video, including helping the team to understand all of the speculatory info that gets generated.
Thank You Shawn! Your explanation of the identified hot spots on the the hill (via thermal drone footage) was crystal clear and very informative, appreciate the time you dedicate to increase our knowledge!
Oh, I'm so glad you shared your comment here again. I read it on the livestream and I laughed so hard. It sums it up 100%. I love that Shawn's livestreams and videos inspire so many people from all over the world.
For those in the US, the volume of lava (1.3 million m^3) is enough to fill the Houston Astrodome; for those in Canada - enough to fill the Rogers Centre.
For those in the UK, it's about the volume of the Principality Stadium in Cardiff. For those in Australia, it's about 3/4 of the volume of The Melbourne Cricket Ground For those on planet Earth (😅), it's about half as big as The Great Pyramid of Giza!
Thanks for the update, Professor! Thanks for debunking some of the misinterpretations that are floating around out there. I too really enjoyed your chat with Nick Z. yesterday. Looking forward to your Geology 101 postings!
Thank you for the update, Shawn, crystal clear as usual, and thanks Amanda Jo for helping you, she spares no effort! Looking forward to the coming videos and very interested in watching your geology 101 soon :)
Many thanks for the depth of information and explanations that you continue to provide - a wonderful and genuine repository of information and knowledge.
Thank you Shawn for the update. It was very interesting. On a side note I really love the live stream yesterday of you and Nick. Thank you for all you do. Greatly appreciated.
Watching after the fact - it cracks me up when you move your chair and raise your arm to turn your lights back on! Thanks so much for educating us, and keeping us in the loop in Iceland
Thank you for the great show with Nick. Loved it. Was a tenure track Biologist, but amateur geomorphologist. Get most satisfaction after retirement is introducing people to the Hawaiian Islands , and taking friends, young and old on trips to the Tetons, and the Lake Bonaville story. Good luck and am throughly enjoy your Iceland Series.
Thank you for the update professor, people like you who are willing to spend their time spreading information and knowledge for free are the real gold of UA-cam. Looking forward to your Geology 101 videos
Even if the magma eruption is very limited each eruption I feel the consequences of a long term event, say 3+ years every 6 - 8 weeks, I don’t believe the Power Plant will survive, nor the Lagoon or the Town. This is very concerning, but I also believe they are aware of this and hopefully working on alternative solutions to mediate any disruptions to the great people there.
Thanks Shawn for making things much more clear. Your explanations are so interesting and really help us understand what's going on. Thanks for taking time to update things for the team! Looking forward to possible additional events and your take on them later this week.
The important point is that magma intrustion is still very hot, has most of its gases and is still plastic, so as pressure rises this can continue to move.
Excellent as always, Nick was great guest please have him back. Thanks for your as usual informative and factual breakdown. Please watch the 2nd drone flight of Isak's not thermal, there's some close footage you may find interesting going over the cooled fissure.
Thank you again Shawn and I wouldn’t be watching / subscribing to your channel if I felt that you did not have integrity and sincerity. In addition I really appreciate you taking the time and effort to educate your growing ‘fan base’ (amateur students - like me). ❤
I had the live from Iceland stream up most of the weekend just to keep an eye on things. I didn't get to see a volcano, I did get to see beautiful aurora dancing over the landscape. I'll take that in trade for not seeing an eruption!
I enjoy the continual updates and the Geology Expertise. Today though, 1 kilometer is 1093.6 yards so it is not 3 football fields but almost 11, without the end zone. As one who grew up during the change to the ISO in my youth, it does make almost a 4 times bigger volume of magma that moved.
I've been wanting to make this comment for about 2 months. Could you during one of your future videos do a small segment of the types of volcanoes? What they erupt in the form of different magmas? What they do and don't do? I've seen so much interest & confusion surrounding volcanoes. The catalyst for me finally asking this question is some folks comparing Grindavik's future to Pompei. It's alot of confusion to put it mildly. Thanks for all you do!
I love your updates, I have learned so much from you and thank you for your teaching style. I feel for the folks whose lives are disrupted by nature, knowing there's nothing to be done. God's earth is a most amazing and wonderful place. 🌎
"The rectangular field of play used for American football games measures 100 yards (91.44 m) long between the goal lines, and 160 feet (48.8 m) (53.3 yards) " Rougly 11 NFL field length is 1km long, not counting the Endzones.
Thanks so much Shawn. It’s great watching from the UK imagining all of these changes taking place in another part of the world, our world, one world. 😊
Thank you Shawn for taking time in your busy schedule to fill us in with the Iceland magma activity...extremely fascinating as always. Today's technology makes it "easier" to predict trends.
Dear Shaun, thank you yet again for a balanced and thoughtful episode! I love the clarity and insight you bring to this otherwise confusing and often quite worrying topic of the ‘Suðurnesjafires’… It’s easy to go overboard with unfounded speculations when applying one’s limited knowledge to such a highly specialised topic. But you keep us connected to the scientific side of the activities at Suðurnes and bring balance. Thank you! ❤️❤️❤️
Shawn, For the seismologists watching your channel you might learn from the Icelandic meteorology service about their earthquake location accuracy. What crustal model do they use, including the seismic velocity structure, what earthquake location software is used, and has it all been verified in Iceland? How many seismometers detect the signals from earthquakes in the region, and what kind are they? Basically I am interested in the precision and accuracy of earthquake locations, especially regarding depth. The epicenters do look very good and consistent. Stuart Wier (Boulder Colorado. PhD geophysics 1977 (Princeton))
Geology 101 was a favorite class in 1964 (continental drift was then a promising, but not yet universally accepted, theory!) I'm looking forward to updated Geology 101, online with you 😄
Pay attention to the scales on the Y axis - some movements look relatively small but the absolute movement may be larger than you think - several cm in some cases, whereas on a different GPS with a different scale the movement may be only mm but appear much larger relative to the Y axis. - It would be worth working out the actual vectors on each GPS station.
I thought I might need a ‘volcano for dummies’ book, but I don’t need one as you explain things very simply and easily. Thank you for that. Di from Cumbria
Thanks for the updates! One nirpick, though, you keep saving 1 km equals 3 football fields, but it is closer to one kilometer equals *10* football fields
Enjoyed your interview with Nick. I'm so happy to find that there are other pathways for people like you that are wonderful teachers but don't want to play the academia game. Research is wonderful for those who love to do it but there are so many wonderful teachers out there that don't necessarily want to do and publish research.
On thermal drones: Are there known "normal" variations in surface temperatures that an expert will write off, but could potentially spot an "off scale" warm spot indicative of magma presence much closer to surface? Or does magma always move quickly between the "basement" and ground level that there is never any chance for surface temperature rising to "off scale" prior to eruption to give a warning?
Shawn, there is also a line 9f bright white vents to the north of the more diffuse steam coming off the rest of the lava field. I have been watching this spot for 5 days, so it is very consistent. When I zoom in on it I see movement in the wind, so it is not a structure or the greenhouse which is further South.
Thanks for the explanation with the steam out of the lava field. I was excited this morning with the live view, really thought it started again!!! I was wrong...😁
For a volume comparison, the internal volume of the Houston Astrodome is about 1,200,000 Cubic meters, and the volume of the Great Pyramid of Giza is about 2,427,614 cubic meters.
I noticed that when I looked at the webcams..and figured it was outgasing..there is another camera view that shows the power plants and in one view you can see a bunch of water vapor but the building itself is obscured in one spot but can be seen in others. So yeah the more I am learning the more I can understand what I am seeing.
11:13 - From the curves, a general pattern can be seen: Fairly linear rise for about 20 days, a dip for 1 day, then linear (ish) rise for 5 days, with eruption at the end of that time. I would estimate the next eruption to be on day 25. I'd call this a 'fried egg' sequence; gas builds in a bubble under the cooked white until it has enough pressure to move sideways an escape with a "bloop". There is never a big 'bloop', but the timing and magnitude vary with a similar type of periodicity.
Hey Shawn, your light keeps going off when you're doing updates. I have a suggestion. Get a small oscillating table fan, take the blades off and just let the cage part move back and forth. Shouldn't make any noise, but the movement will probably be enough to keep your light on until you shut the fan off.
I went and looked at the @IcelandFPV video at time 50 minutes with the thermal hot spots that Shawn discusses starting around 24:00 in this video. I agree that those look like steam coming out of the ground there due to shaking. It seems to be a steep slope covered with gravel. Isak noted that there was a small landslide or mudslide there recently. That area was likely shaken by many of the earthquakes on November 10, 2023 and the later seismic episodes. The mudslide was before the February 8 lava flow because the lava flow covered the base, but it is an indication of how that area has been shaken recently.
Great video @shwanwllsey. I also understand and see now that shaping/ creating a landscape and new land by volcano's takes Million years . For ecologists is it als interesting stuff , how live slowly habitat this planet. The behaviors for everty type of volcano is as you can say unique.
QUESTION @SHAWN - Hi prof. Do you know if the greenhouse just behind the protection wall and near the still hot lava is in activity (water and heat supply working) and if the lava temperature has any effect?
Please be sure to LIKE and SUBSCRIBE. You can support my educational videos by clicking on the "Thanks" button just above (right of Like button) or by going here: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8
Subtítulos en Español Plis 🇪🇦🙏
@@adarubia1971 Yes, I agree but can't seem to figure out how to enable Spanish subtitles. Any tips?
@@adarubia1971 You *should* be able to get UA-cam to show you auto-translated auto-generated subtitles. First, turn on closed-captions using the "CC" icon. Then use the Gear icon (settings) and select "Subtitle/CC English (auto-generated)". In the menu that shows up (giving choices of "Off", "English (auto-generated)", and "Auto-translate".) Select "Auto-translate" and then select "Spanish" from the list of languages shown!
? Is there any concern for the international airport? Thanks Shawn
@@shawnwillsey there's no easy way to do it yet, pretty much have to do it manually since it won't translate from the auto generated subtitles. believe it's something they're beta testing right now though. but to do it in youtube studio, go to subtitles then select the video, select english as the original language and you can add spanish subtitles. then click the - right of the language you added under subtitles to edit them and that's where you can manually add them.
You said you hope we can feel your sincerity and authenticity: ya, you betcha! (from a Norske in Minnesota) I hope you can feel the sincere and authentic appreciation from your worldwide viewers, too. I never fail to think, “Wow, that’s cool!” Thanks for the excellent update today!
Nice and informative update Shaun! Really appriciate that you did not use my images, instead telling your viewers about the video and explaining your thoughts about it in details.
I want to clarify one thing, we where not looking for potential eruption area with the thermal drone😅
The main goal with the thermal drone today was to capture images to visualise the heat of the new road in comparison to the lava field around it🤓
Thanks for the clarification, Isak. I did not mean to imply that was your intent but certainly some viewers watching made that assumption or at least entertained the idea. I linked your video to the description here. Thermal drone is great tool for usage as you explain here. I just hope folks don't interpret to mean more than it shows. Thanks for your great work!
I just watched it, prior to this. Great job Isak. Your videos are priceless
Just to clarify, I wasn't implying Isak was looking for potential eruption, nor did he say anything to make me think that. It was just an odd thing, noticeable on the thermal images. I'm certainly no expert but I've always been fascinated by volcanoes so I've been watching and learning about whats been happening in Iceland since it made news here in the Uk when poor Grindavik was quaking. I can't wait for the next eruption...but saying that, I'm not some sicko and hope that it won't cause any damage to human life, Blue Lagoon, the roads and infrastructure, Svartsengi power plant or Grindavik. I only wish these were safe enough to be tourist eruptions, like Fagradalsfjall....because I've saved and now I could actually fly out there 😂. I'd love to visit Iceland all because of everyone's fascinating footage recently. Thanks guys ❤
Thank you, Shawn, for jumping in, taking more of your precious time, with this video, including helping the team to understand all of the speculatory info that gets generated.
Thank You Shawn! Your explanation of the identified hot spots on the the hill (via thermal drone footage) was crystal clear and very informative, appreciate the time you dedicate to increase our knowledge!
Thank you Shawn! Loved your stream yesterday with Nick!
Great that you mentioned Isak who has been doing some fantastic live streams and intelligent commentary.
Thank you for that informative video. Greetings from Switzerland.
Thanks for the conversion of magma volume to something visual - very helpful!
Thank you Shawn! So many click bait sites out there - so glad to have you out there keeping us up to date.
Found the livestream with Nick very interesting and educational! Thanks to you both!
Isak did a live thermal drone flight and there is a few fissures on the side of Storage Skogfell volcano. Very interesting.
Si estoy viendo también los vídeos de Isak , un gran trabajo con su Dron👍
Si estoy viendo también los vídeos de Isak , un gran trabajo con su Dron👍
I have learned so much from your videos and live chats. Thank you from this 80 year old grandmother!
Thank you Shawn and Amanda-Jo.
I'm really enjoying these videos and the live sessions. I told my husband on Saturday that this the Superbowl for nerds. We really do need T-shirts!
Oh, I'm so glad you shared your comment here again. I read it on the livestream and I laughed so hard. It sums it up 100%. I love that Shawn's livestreams and videos inspire so many people from all over the world.
I have a shirt coming today that I am going to wear when it erupts. It has a volcano on it and says "Volcanoes kick ash".
Thank you for this update and information. Greetings from the Netherlands.
For those in the US, the volume of lava (1.3 million m^3)
is enough to fill the Houston Astrodome; for those in Canada - enough to fill the Rogers Centre.
If you filled the astrodome right now you'de have an awful lot of BBQ Pork and Beef.
@@Darisiabgal7573 Enough to feed quite a few hungry Texans!
Thank you!
For those in the UK, it's about the volume of the Principality Stadium in Cardiff.
For those in Australia, it's about 3/4 of the volume of The Melbourne Cricket Ground
For those on planet Earth (😅), it's about half as big as The Great Pyramid of Giza!
Thanks for the Aussie reference! 👍@@timpointing
Thanks for the update, Professor! Thanks for debunking some of the misinterpretations that are floating around out there. I too really enjoyed your chat with Nick Z. yesterday. Looking forward to your Geology 101 postings!
thank you for the update, just caught up, hope when you get up today you have a great day, 11am GMT here in uk now so still night over the pond
Waiting for the Big Bear Valley eagle eggs to hatch, so I saw you were on right away.
Thank you for the explanation of the blue haze/fog type emission.
That was great, really informative, thank-you. I'm really enjoying your channel!
Great interview with Nick Gentner. Thanks for arranging that.
Thank you for the update, Shawn, crystal clear as usual, and thanks Amanda Jo for helping you, she spares no effort! Looking forward to the coming videos and very interested in watching your geology 101 soon :)
Thanks for the updates Shawn!
Thanks for this update Shawn. I thoroughly enjoyed your livestream with Prof Zentner.
Many thanks for the depth of information and explanations that you continue to provide - a wonderful and genuine repository of information and knowledge.
Thank you, Shawn, always appreciate your informed updates.
Thank you Shawn for the update. It was very interesting. On a side note I really love the live stream yesterday of you and Nick. Thank you for all you do. Greatly appreciated.
Watching after the fact - it cracks me up when you move your chair and raise your arm to turn your lights back on! Thanks so much for educating us, and keeping us in the loop in Iceland
Some comic relief to break up the science.
LOL!!@@shawnwillsey
Thank you for updating us.
Interview with Nick was great!
Great conversation with Nick yesterday (3/3/24).
Thank you for the great show with Nick. Loved it. Was a tenure track Biologist, but amateur geomorphologist. Get most satisfaction after retirement is introducing people to the Hawaiian Islands , and taking friends, young and old on trips to the Tetons, and the Lake Bonaville story. Good luck and am throughly enjoy your Iceland Series.
Thank you for the update professor, people like you who are willing to spend their time spreading information and knowledge for free are the real gold of UA-cam. Looking forward to your Geology 101 videos
Even if the magma eruption is very limited each eruption I feel the consequences of a long term event, say 3+ years every 6 - 8 weeks, I don’t believe the Power Plant will survive, nor the Lagoon or the Town. This is very concerning, but I also believe they are aware of this and hopefully working on alternative solutions to mediate any disruptions to the great people there.
Thanks Shawn for making things much more clear. Your explanations are so interesting and really help us understand what's going on. Thanks for taking time to update things for the team! Looking forward to possible additional events and your take on them later this week.
The important point is that magma intrustion is still very hot, has most of its gases and is still plastic, so as pressure rises this can continue to move.
Thank you Prof. Shawn for your Always comprehensive assessments.
Nebraska Kid🌱
Excellent as always, Nick was great guest please have him back. Thanks for your as usual informative and factual breakdown. Please watch the 2nd drone flight of Isak's not thermal, there's some close footage you may find interesting going over the cooled fissure.
Thanks for today and the very enjoyable interview with Nick
Thank you again Shawn and I wouldn’t be watching / subscribing to your channel if I felt that you did not have integrity and sincerity. In addition I really appreciate you taking the time and effort to educate your growing ‘fan base’ (amateur students - like me). ❤
Thanks for your time, and sharing your knowledge and tools with us. Appreciate your dedication.
I had the live from Iceland stream up most of the weekend just to keep an eye on things. I didn't get to see a volcano, I did get to see beautiful aurora dancing over the landscape. I'll take that in trade for not seeing an eruption!
I enjoy the continual updates and the Geology Expertise. Today though, 1 kilometer is 1093.6 yards so it is not 3 football fields but almost 11, without the end zone. As one who grew up during the change to the ISO in my youth, it does make almost a 4 times bigger volume of magma that moved.
Thanks Shawn - as always!
I've been wanting to make this comment for about 2 months. Could you during one of your future videos do a small segment of the types of volcanoes? What they erupt in the form of different magmas? What they do and don't do? I've seen so much interest & confusion surrounding volcanoes. The catalyst for me finally asking this question is some folks comparing Grindavik's future to Pompei. It's alot of confusion to put it mildly. Thanks for all you do!
Big thank you, Shawn. All your videos are so helpful and today's comprehensive and clear. Suzy, from NSW Australia
As always informative and professional. Your students should learn a lot from you and if they don't, well that is on them.
Excellent coverage. Nothing like real life events to make you want to know more!
There was also a little mudslide on Stora-Skogfell in the same area as the thermal hot spots.
Because 2 tectonic plates are pulling apart, we should think of the area between them as 'spongy', with rifts, voids and air or gas pockets.
I love your updates, I have learned so much from you and thank you for your teaching style. I feel for the folks whose lives are disrupted by nature, knowing there's nothing to be done. God's earth is a most amazing and wonderful place. 🌎
yes i did watch it shawn in full, loved it.
This is all very fascinating. Volcano watch never ends!
"The rectangular field of play used for American football games measures 100 yards (91.44 m) long between the goal lines, and 160 feet (48.8 m) (53.3 yards) "
Rougly 11 NFL field length is 1km long, not counting the Endzones.
Thanks so much Shawn. It’s great watching from the UK imagining all of these changes taking place in another part of the world, our world, one world. 😊
Shawn! I hope you’ll reach out to Isak at some point and do a collab with him, too! This would be so cool! And I can’t wait for Gylfi, too!!! 😊😊😊
Thank you Shawn for taking time in your busy schedule to fill us in with the Iceland magma activity...extremely fascinating as always. Today's technology makes it "easier" to predict trends.
Wonderful update. I was waiting to hear your explanations on what has happened recently. You make information so easy to digest. Thanks again. ✌🏽
truly appreciate your analysis every time you post them. It makes things way more clear than if i would simply watch the news.
Thanks for sharing your time and reasoned take on these events.
Thank u for most excellent updates with out the dramas
Thank you so much for the precious explanations 😊
Yes, thank you, DR Shawn!
Dear Shaun, thank you yet again for a balanced and thoughtful episode! I love the clarity and insight you bring to this otherwise confusing and often quite worrying topic of the ‘Suðurnesjafires’…
It’s easy to go overboard with unfounded speculations when applying one’s limited knowledge to such a highly specialised topic. But you keep us connected to the scientific side of the activities at Suðurnes and bring balance.
Thank you! ❤️❤️❤️
Ok, I’ve missed it all, I am watching a re run. That’s ok. 😊
Thank you again for another informative update.
Appreciate your informative vids.
Thanks!
Many thanks for your support of geology education.
Thank you for the informative up date
Shawn, For the seismologists watching your channel you might learn from the Icelandic meteorology service about their earthquake location accuracy. What crustal model do they use, including the seismic velocity structure, what earthquake location software is used, and has it all been verified in Iceland? How many seismometers detect the signals from earthquakes in the region, and what kind are they? Basically I am interested in the precision and accuracy of earthquake locations, especially regarding depth. The epicenters do look very good and consistent. Stuart Wier (Boulder Colorado. PhD geophysics 1977 (Princeton))
Geology 101 was a favorite class in 1964 (continental drift was then a promising, but not yet universally accepted, theory!) I'm looking forward to updated Geology 101, online with you 😄
Pay attention to the scales on the Y axis - some movements look relatively small but the absolute movement may be larger than you think - several cm in some cases, whereas on a different GPS with a different scale the movement may be only mm but appear much larger relative to the Y axis. - It would be worth working out the actual vectors on each GPS station.
Thanks, Dr. WIllsey!
Hooray for science!!
Eye opening Graham Kent talk on uctv 16 years ago showing amazing Scripps 3D multi channelled Chirp models of fault zones.
Thanks Shawn 0:39 Iceland time
I thought I might need a ‘volcano for dummies’ book, but I don’t need one as you explain things very simply and easily.
Thank you for that.
Di from Cumbria
Thanks Shawn as always!
Thanks for the updates! One nirpick, though, you keep saving 1 km equals 3 football fields, but it is closer to one kilometer equals *10* football fields
Brilliant analysis Thank you shawn :)
Enjoyed your interview with Nick. I'm so happy to find that there are other pathways for people like you that are wonderful teachers but don't want to play the academia game. Research is wonderful for those who love to do it but there are so many wonderful teachers out there that don't necessarily want to do and publish research.
Hi all from new York from GeoZack
Good lesson, Shawn .
On thermal drones: Are there known "normal" variations in surface temperatures that an expert will write off, but could potentially spot an "off scale" warm spot indicative of magma presence much closer to surface? Or does magma always move quickly between the "basement" and ground level that there is never any chance for surface temperature rising to "off scale" prior to eruption to give a warning?
Shawn, there is also a line 9f bright white vents to the north of the more diffuse steam coming off the rest of the lava field. I have been watching this spot for 5 days, so it is very consistent. When I zoom in on it I see movement in the wind, so it is not a structure or the greenhouse which is further South.
Sound is good
Nice explanations, thanks
Thanks for the explanation with the steam out of the lava field. I was excited this morning with the live view, really thought it started again!!! I was wrong...😁
For a volume comparison, the internal volume of the Houston Astrodome is about 1,200,000 Cubic meters, and the volume of the Great Pyramid of Giza is about 2,427,614 cubic meters.
I noticed that when I looked at the webcams..and figured it was outgasing..there is another camera view that shows the power plants and in one view you can see a bunch of water vapor but the building itself is obscured in one spot but can be seen in others. So yeah the more I am learning the more I can understand what I am seeing.
Wow your just great thanks
11:13 - From the curves, a general pattern can be seen: Fairly linear rise for about 20 days, a dip for 1 day, then linear (ish) rise for 5 days, with eruption at the end of that time. I would estimate the next eruption to be on day 25. I'd call this a 'fried egg' sequence; gas builds in a bubble under the cooked white until it has enough pressure to move sideways an escape with a "bloop". There is never a big 'bloop', but the timing and magnitude vary with a similar type of periodicity.
They had a 3.4 magnitude this morning 5 miles north of Smiths Ferry, ID. I live about 55 miles from there but didn't feel anything.
Ty Shawn.
Hey Shawn, your light keeps going off when you're doing updates. I have a suggestion. Get a small oscillating table fan, take the blades off and just let the cage part move back and forth. Shouldn't make any noise, but the movement will probably be enough to keep your light on until you shut the fan off.
I went and looked at the @IcelandFPV video at time 50 minutes with the thermal hot spots that Shawn discusses starting around 24:00 in this video. I agree that those look like steam coming out of the ground there due to shaking. It seems to be a steep slope covered with gravel. Isak noted that there was a small landslide or mudslide there recently. That area was likely shaken by many of the earthquakes on November 10, 2023 and the later seismic episodes. The mudslide was before the February 8 lava flow because the lava flow covered the base, but it is an indication of how that area has been shaken recently.
Thank you!
Great video @shwanwllsey. I also understand and see now that shaping/ creating a landscape and new land by volcano's takes Million years . For ecologists is it als interesting stuff , how live slowly habitat this planet. The behaviors for everty type of volcano is as you can say unique.
QUESTION @SHAWN - Hi prof. Do you know if the greenhouse just behind the protection wall and near the still hot lava is in activity (water and heat supply working) and if the lava temperature has any effect?