Would you happen to know any info on the Coso Range and Little Lake area in California? There is a lot of old lava activity right there! Your work is amazing, btw! Keep up with it! You are amazing at making the scary stuff a little less scary with a lot of logic behind it! ✌️🖖🙏🙂
You knock me over with your scholarly approach, and scholarly apparatuses (apparati?) like in-frame notes and footnotes, and these citations. I feel like I'm back in grad school (which I miss)! No one else on YT comes even close. I'm developing a YT channel and will do the same. You're an inspiration.
I was visiting mono lake in July 2020 and I saw a plume of smoke come from around the Nevada border, and it was huge. The plume of smoke was multiple times taller than the mountains in the distance. Was there an eruption then? I can’t find anything on it.
Wow, I wasn't expecting this video to be this detailed covering this topic. Even covering expansion, slip and rotation of the faults in and around these active areas. Thank you for compiling this
I know these longer videos take "an absurd amount of time" but these "once-in-a-while" longer videos are fascinating. A broad look at a volcanic region is very interesting and I greatly appreciate all your work. You are an excellent educator. Thank you. Cheers!
Thank you very much. This answered so many of my questions and helped me understand this geologically complex area. I expect that I will watch it again this spring before I spend my summer driving around these fascinating landscapes. 😃
Wow, the ClearLake volcanic field sounds remarkably similar to the Auckland volcanic field, directly under NZ's largest city, with a population of about 1.5 m
Love how much information you provide in each vid, where I'm from doesn't really get any kind of natural disaster. I just love learning about geological features. Keep it up it's enjoyable. Could you do a vid on Scafell Pike or anything from the lake district of uk?
You have to be one of the most attentive RUclips channel hosts ever! Ty Am going to try to give you a one time donation when my ss check comes.. ont be too much but I know your research needs any & all so I know how appreciative you are❤️💃
Very informative. I didn't know about many of these volcanoes and I have lived here all my life. Lassen and Shasta take the place of most known. I live about 2 hours away from Clear Lake 😊
Konocti is rumored to be mostly hollow and some think it may have the largest cavern on earth. Indians would throw painted sticks into openings on the mountain and they would later appear in the lake, but miles away. I heard private property owners dynamited all the entrances in the 60's due to fear of liability in potential accidents by unauthorized explorers. I've hiked to the top numerous times and it is a wonderful view.
@@TheDanEdwards I agree and I live in California. You'd have to live under a non-igneous rock to not have at least heard of the majority of the volcanoes here, but there's certainly not very much discussion around the activity of the volcanic fields. At least not that I've heard about.
This is an outstanding video. I've driven through the Mojave desert and seen black lava fields adjacent to I-40 that are still barren of vegetation. This presentation adds new perspective to what I've seen with my own eyes. Thanks for your time and hard work.
Great volcano video and information! I learned some new things today and there's a lot of math involved too. How does the USGS determine if a volcano is low threat, moderate, etc (could you please give examples of volcanoes)? Perhaps you could do a video about the topic? I believe that the first recorded eruption of Mt. Shasta was in 1250 BCE with the last known eruption to be in 1786, but I could be wrong. I look forward to all of your future videos!
Hey Timothy, hope you are well. ? I've noticed some Earthquake activity near the Kolumbo marine volcano in the Aegean sea region of Greece. Is this anything of concern for those in the area? Thanks.
Lol, the closed captions don't seem to understand the word "fumarole". It's putting in "funeral" and "feral" instead. I think the algorithm needs geology classes. 💁♀️
Look up the BBC docudrama Atlantis:End Of A World,Birth Of A Legend;it's 14 years old as it came out during the spring or summer of 2011,but it is a good docudrama depicting an ultra-plinian volcanic eruption that would have ranked between 7 & 8 on the Volcanic Explosivity Index that brought the Bronze Age & the Bronze Age civilizations,cultures,and the local,regional & global economies at the time to a cataclysmic end,and ushered in the Iron Age and several Iron Age civilizations,and a new local,regional,and global economy & new cultures being established. The Santorini Caldera was once called the Theira during the Late Bronze Age and had destroyed the Ancient Minoan Empire in a single day and night,and was the inspiration for the Ancient Greek Philosopher Plato's mythical tale of Atlantis 1,500 years after the cataclysm had occurred. It was one of the most violent volcanic eruptions in recorded human history; 3 times larger that Krackatoa,a 100 times larger than Mt. St. Hellens,and more than 34,000 times more powerful than the atomic bombs;that were dropped on Hiroshima & Nagasaki,at the end of WW2.
I've been wondering the same thing. Google owns RUclips so there's no reason for such an archaic algorithm when they have advanced tech and AI. How does it mistake 705,000 for 75,000 when the word "hundred" was clear as day? How's rhyolite lava mistaken for rolly lava? I feel bad for deaf people and can only hope they have some kind of better accessibility assistance with RUclips videos than the captions provided.
An excellent compilation. Can you discuss the impact of geothermal powerplant activity upon the magma chambers into which we are pumping water? This has to be a cooling factor; I am wondering whether this is an exhaustible resource (i.e. we cool the magma to the point where the generated steam isn't energetic enough to be worth doing) and whether this materially affects the behavior of the magma chamber (i.e. can we simultaneously extract energy and "pacify" magma chambers which are potentially dangerous such as those in Iceland.
Nevermind! Sadly, I'm pretty sure that these are clear-cut areas. What are the geometric formations scattered around the name "Viola" near Lassen Peak (at 10:23)? They must be pretty big... They don't look natural, but they don't look like human constructions, either. Are they relatively recent rock formations? If so, how were they created? They are markedly different from their surroundings, which makes me wonder if they are a type of rock that's harder than the more eroded rocky terrain nearby.
Get yourself some really tough boots. I hiked 14 miles of lava fields in Hawaii and it really did a number on the soles of my Solomon hiking shoes! They were quite chewed up. Also, you might want to wear gloves and potentially even some knee guards. I saw the results of what happens when you trip and fall on the glassy, shardy volcanic material as I passed by some of the other hikers. Bleeding hands and knees. Granted, not every volcanic field is quite as glassy as it is in Hawaii.
@rogerj.fugere3570 I think some of the areas don't even allow dogs in unless you hike in from a back way and not through a national park entrance. Bring plenty of water and food too because there's nothing otherwise.
Oh yea one out of 5 new massive steam vents pumping. Is near Borrade lake, another is this side of mountain ridge of the Guisers. Geo thermal power plant. Another North of uperLake. One by horse shoe bay. Another between Mt. Hanna add Konocti cinder mt. Never Stop.... thankyou.
I really enjoyed this information about volcanoes in my state. However, you continue to mispronounce Mt. Shasta. It’s a flat “a” not a hard a. Mt. ShaaaSTA, with the first “a” sounding like bad.
I learned the opposite and I live in California. The first "a" in Shasta should sound like the "a" in "water" not like the "a" in "bad". I think in the end it really doesn't matter though. Toe-mah-toe, toe-may-toe. 🤷♀️
Just for the record, the indigenous name for Mt. Shasta is "Uytaahkoo" (pronounced Wee-tah-ah-koh) which is from the Shasta language. "Uytaahkoo" roughly translates to "Great Spirit Mountain" or "Mountain of the Spirits", reflecting the deep spiritual significance of the mountain to the indigenous peoples of the region. However, it's worth noting that the mountain was considered sacred by many Native American tribes in the region, not just the Shasta, and some may have had other names for it.
@@WildAlchemicalSpirit Considering you live in California, I believe you. And it does matter. In Texas, English speakers wreak terrible butchery on the Spanish language. In Houston there's a street named San Felipe. It should be pronounced Sahn Fe-LEE-pay, but most Anglos say San FILL-lip-ee, or even worse, San Fell-LEAP.
@@WildAlchemicalSpirit I don't care. And I don't believe in spirits, gods, or other such nonsense. That crap is for ignorant people who believe in spirits, gods, and other such nonsense.
Thank you so very much! For settling our fears. Yet living here for so many years and so many vents, ( LACK OF EARTH QUAKES) Is un settling! The steam vents obviously me and others havenever been seen as massive today.... Thank you again and the 4.7 was a wake up with out after shocks.....
My tribe records clear lake eruptions. Bear clan tsera meaning Sarah species non humans in Isaiah 51:1-12. Bear clan gods who were gods of Egypt hosea12:8-13:9 as confirmed by genetics. We are from all norte California as bear clan monument is in american canyon northern California for which USA was named. That's right. Lol. But America means yellow lotus in shoshoni and all pre siberian native languages. That's why south America is America Also because lotuses grow there too. The main food of royals Egyptians buddhists original jews and all red people ( pre siberian natives who are o negative red eyed as rev2:18 says oh yeah. God is a strange way to say lemurs who have zero monkey or ape or homonid DNA just shrew lemur)
The most uninformed illiterate people I have ever encountered weren't from some southern state, they were from N. California, Wyoming runs a close second.
Here is my full complete sources/citations list for today’s video!
[1] U.S. Geological Survey
[2] National Parks Service
[3] Nathenson, M., Clynne, M.A, and Muffler, L.J.P., 2012, Eruption probabilities for the Lassen Volcanic Center and regional volcanism, northern California, and probabilities for large explosive eruptions in the Cascade Range: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2012-5176-B, 23 p. (Available at pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2012/5176/b/.)
[4] Clynne, M. A., & Muffler, L. J. P. (2010). Geologic map of Lassen Volcanic National Park and vicinity, California (Scientific Investigations Map 2899). doi:10.3133/sim2899.
[5] Eppler, Dean & Fink, Jonathan & Fletcher, Raymond. (1987). Rheologic properties and kinematics of emplacement of the Chaos Jumbles rockfall avalanche, Lassen Volcanic National Park, California. Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres. 92. 10.1029/JB092iB05p03623.
[6] Solène Pouget, Marcus Bursik, Joaquín A. Cortés, Chris Hayward, Use of principal component analysis for identification of Rockland and Trego Hot Springs tephras in the Hat Creek Graben, northeastern California, USA, Quaternary Research, Volume 81, Issue 1, 2014, Pages 125-137, ISSN 0033-5894, doi.org/10.1016/j.yqres.2013.10.012. (www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0033589413001245)
[7] J. Ewert, A. Diefenbach, D. Ramsey, "2018 Update to the U.S. Geological Survey National Volcanic
Threat Assessment", U.S. Geological Survey, Accessed October 22, 2022. pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2018/5140/sir20185140.pdf
[8] Source of Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) methodology and criteria: Newhall, C. G., and Self, S. (1982), The volcanic explosivity index (VEI) an estimate of explosive magnitude for historical volcanism, J. Geophys. Res., 87(C2), 1231-1238, doi:10.1029/JC087iC02p01231. Accessed / Read by RUclips.com/GeologyHub on Oct 5th, 2022.
[9] USGS Denver Library Photographic Collection
[10] Buckland, Hannah & Cashman, Katharine & Engwell, Samantha & Rust, Alison. (2020). Sources of uncertainty in the Mazama isopachs and the implications for interpreting distal tephra deposits from large magnitude eruptions. Bulletin of Volcanology. 82. 10.1007/s00445-020-1362-1. CC BY 4.0. This source was used to cite the volume/size of Crater Lake's caldera forming eruption.
[11] VEIs, dates/years, composition, tephra layer name, DRE estimates, and bulk tephra volume estimates for volcanic eruptions shown in this video which were assigned a VEI 4 or larger and are not Crater Lake's 5783 eruption are sourced from the LaMEVE database (British Geological Survey © UKRI), www2.bgs.ac.uk/vogripa/view/controller.cfc?method=lameve, Used with Permission
[12] Valentine, G. A., Fierstein, J., & White, J. D. L. (2022). Lateral extent of pyroclastic surge deposits at Ubehebe Crater (Death Valley, California) and implications for hazards in monogenetic volcanic fields. Geophysical Research Letters, 49, e2022GL100561. doi.org/10.1029/2022GL100561
[13] Fierstein, Judy & Hildreth, Wes. (2017). Eruptive history of the Ubehebe Crater cluster, Death Valley, California. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. 335. 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2017.02.010.
[14] "Bailey, R.A., 1989, Geologic map of Long Valley caldera, Mono-Inyo Craters volcanic chain, and vicinity, Mono County, California. U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Map I-1933, scale 1:62,500".
Note: This map was used to designated fumaroles, underwater explosion crater, phreatic craters, lava flow extents, and volcanic rock types for the Mono Lake volcanic field.
[15] Hildreth, Wes, and Fierstein, Judy, 2016, Eruptive history of Mammoth Mountain and its mafic periphery, California:
U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1812, 128 p., 2 plates, scale 1:24,000,
dx.doi.org/10.3133/pp1812. The outlines of vents were traced from this source and overlaid onto Google Earth in this video.
[16] Wes Hildreth, Judy Fierstein, Andrew Calvert, Early postcaldera rhyolite and structural resurgence at Long Valley Caldera, California, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, Volume 335, 2017, Pages 1-34, ISSN 0377-0273, doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2017.01.005. (www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0377027316303092)
[17] Ashton F. Flinders, David R. Shelly, Philip B. Dawson, David P. Hill, Barbara Tripoli, Yang Shen; Seismic evidence for significant melt beneath the Long Valley Caldera, California, USA. Geology 2018;; 46 (9): 799-802. doi: doi.org/10.1130/G45094.1
[18] Alaska Volcano Observatory
[19] University of Alaska Fairbanks, Geophysical Institute
[20] Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys
[21] Marcaida, Mae & Vazquez, Jorge & Stelten, Mark & Miller, Jonathan. (2019). Constraining the Early Eruptive History of the Mono Craters Rhyolites, California, Based on 238 U‐ 230 Th Isochron Dating of Their Explosive and Effusive Products. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 20. 10.1029/2018GC008052.
[22] Avellán, Denis & Sosa-Ceballos, Giovanni. (2017). Genesis and evolution of the Cerro Prieto Volcanic Complex, Baja California, Mexico. Bulletin of Volcanology. 79. 10.1007/s00445-017-1126-8.
[23] Ball Jessica L., Stratigraphy and eruption history of maars in the Clear Lake Volcanic Field, California, Frontiers in Earth Science, Volume 10, 2022, www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2022.911129. DOI=10.3389/feart.2022.911129, ISSN=2296-6463, CC BY 4.0
[24] Mauldin, H. K. (1972). Two indian legends of lake county, California. Lakeport, California: Lakeport, Calif: Lake County Library Project.
[25] Mauldin, H. (1977). Lake County Indian lore. Lake County Historical Society. Lakeport, California: Lake County Historical Society, 39p.)
[26] Jared R. Peacock, Tait E. Earney, Margaret T. Mangan, William D. Schermerhorn, Jonathan M. Glen, Mark Walters, Craig Hartline,
Geophysical characterization of the Northwest Geysers geothermal field, California, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, Volume 399, 2020, 106882, ISSN 0377-0273, doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2020.106882. (www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0377027319306389)
[27] Wagner, David & Saucedo, George & Clahan, Kevin & Fleck, Robert & Langenheim, Victoria & Mclaughlin, R. & Sarna-Wojcicki, Andrei & Allen, James & Deino, Alan. (2011). Geology, geochronology, and paleogeography of the southern Sonoma volcanic field and adjacent areas, northern San Francisco Bay region, California. Geosphere. 7. 658-683. 10.1130/GES00626.1.
[28] Donnelly-Nolan, J.M., Nathenson, Manuel, Champion, D.E., Ramsey, D.W., Lowenstern. J. B., and Ewert. J.W.,
2007, Volcano hazards assessment for Medicine Lake volcano, northern Californa: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5174-A, 26 p., 1 plate.
[29] Julie M. Donnelly-Nolan, Timothy L. Grove, Marvin A. Lanphere, Duane E. Champion, David W. Ramsey, Eruptive history and tectonic setting of Medicine Lake Volcano, a large rear-arc volcano in the southern Cascades, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, Volume 177, Issue 2, 2008, Pages 313-328, ISSN 0377-0273, doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.04.023. (www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0377027308002667)
[30] Donnelly-Nolan, J.M., 2010, Geologic map of Medicine Lake volcano, northern California: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map 2927, pamphlet 48 p., 2 sheets, scale 1:50,000, pubs.usgs.gov/sim/2927/.
Would you happen to know any info on the Coso Range and Little Lake area in California? There is a lot of old lava activity right there! Your work is amazing, btw! Keep up with it! You are amazing at making the scary stuff a little less scary with a lot of logic behind it! ✌️🖖🙏🙂
You knock me over with your scholarly approach, and scholarly apparatuses (apparati?) like in-frame notes and footnotes, and these citations. I feel like I'm back in grad school (which I miss)! No one else on YT comes even close. I'm developing a YT channel and will do the same. You're an inspiration.
how come you considers these active
@@philipbahia2707I think that any volcano that's erupted within a certain amount of time, say 100,000 years or maybe less, is considered active.
I was visiting mono lake in July 2020 and I saw a plume of smoke come from around the Nevada border, and it was huge. The plume of smoke was multiple times taller than the mountains in the distance. Was there an eruption then? I can’t find anything on it.
Wow, I wasn't expecting this video to be this detailed covering this topic. Even covering expansion, slip and rotation of the faults in and around these active areas. Thank you for compiling this
Thank you for making this- this completes the work you startedwith the active volcanos of Oregon and Washington State.
🎉 WOW. Your depth of research is simply drop-jaw amazing. Thank you so much. LOVE YOUR CONTENT.
I know these longer videos take "an absurd amount of time" but these "once-in-a-while" longer videos are fascinating. A broad look at a volcanic region is very interesting and I greatly appreciate all your work. You are an excellent educator. Thank you. Cheers!
Short and concise! Thank you for being a gem in this space.
Thanks!
Thanks for all the hard work on these videos!
This will go down as one of my favorite videos, very detailed and well done❤
Thank you very much. This answered so many of my questions and helped me understand this geologically complex area. I expect that I will watch it again this spring before I spend my summer driving around these fascinating landscapes. 😃
Thanks as always, Geology Hub!
We have been incredibly fortunate to be in a period of geologic calm.
Love these longer in-depth videos!🌋
I know nothing about geology or volcanoes, but that doesn’t stop me from enjoying your channel. Thank you for sharing with us!
I live in California and it's almost like you read my mind about some things that I wanted to know and then made this video. Thanks! 😅
Finally! A video longer than 5 minutes! Great job!
I legit had no idea all of these existed, I only knew about one or two!
Yet another very awesome video.
Love this! California has epic geology
Wow, the ClearLake volcanic field sounds remarkably similar to the Auckland volcanic field, directly under NZ's largest city, with a population of about 1.5 m
Love how much information you provide in each vid, where I'm from doesn't really get any kind of natural disaster. I just love learning about geological features. Keep it up it's enjoyable. Could you do a vid on Scafell Pike or anything from the lake district of uk?
Amazing! Thank you for your hard work!
You have to be one of the most attentive RUclips channel hosts ever! Ty
Am going to try to give you a one time donation when my ss check comes.. ont be too much but I know your research needs any & all so I know how appreciative you are❤️💃
Perfect timing thank you
By the gods, another 50-min video))
This is the best video that you have done so far! Great job
Lassen Peak is my favorite Cascades volcano.
It is quite a fun volcanic complex :)
Very informative. I didn't know about many of these volcanoes and I have lived here all my life. Lassen and Shasta take the place of most known. I live about 2 hours away from Clear Lake 😊
You might want to look at Santorini. Word has it that the area is beginning to act up. The sources are saying that there is tectonic activity starting
This could be titled, California's Greatest Volcanic Hits.
Thanks. This is quite informative and will be great for the morning drive...
Konocti is rumored to be mostly hollow and some think it may have the largest cavern on earth. Indians would throw painted sticks into openings on the mountain and they would later appear in the lake, but miles away. I heard private property owners dynamited all the entrances in the 60's due to fear of liability in potential accidents by unauthorized explorers. I've hiked to the top numerous times and it is a wonderful view.
The majority of Californians have no idea these exist.
Based on my experience with the average Californian, I'm not surprised.
@@Codysdab How superior of you.
IME most Californians know some volcanoes exist in the state, but the volcanic fields in the desert are the ones most people miss.
@@TheDanEdwards I agree and I live in California. You'd have to live under a non-igneous rock to not have at least heard of the majority of the volcanoes here, but there's certainly not very much discussion around the activity of the volcanic fields. At least not that I've heard about.
Good, we don't need all those forests burned down
I live in California and expected to learn nothing. But i did! Even if i knew of all these and study on a novice level.
This is an outstanding video. I've driven through the Mojave desert and seen black lava fields adjacent to I-40 that are still barren of vegetation. This presentation adds new perspective to what I've seen with my own eyes. Thanks for your time and hard work.
Great volcano video and information! I learned some new things today and there's a lot of math involved too. How does the USGS determine if a volcano is low threat, moderate, etc (could you please give examples of volcanoes)? Perhaps you could do a video about the topic?
I believe that the first recorded eruption of Mt. Shasta was in 1250 BCE with the last known eruption to be in 1786, but I could be wrong. I look forward to all of your future videos!
52 minutes? Ohh, I need to back out and come back later with coffee and a snack.
There is an ongoing earthquake swarm in santorini-kolumbo, greece... You might want to make a video about it.
Almost movie length on volcanoes!
So awesome!
Hey Timothy, hope you are well. ? I've noticed some Earthquake activity near the Kolumbo marine volcano in the Aegean sea region of Greece. Is this anything of concern for those in the area? Thanks.
Lol, the closed captions don't seem to understand the word "fumarole". It's putting in "funeral" and "feral" instead. I think the algorithm needs geology classes. 💁♀️
For def. It's hilarious.
I turn CC: off because it's so distracting.
God made Adam and Eve, not Florence and the machine.
@jasonhanson6563 Anyone understand that?
Volcán activo de Colima presenta actividad sísmica
Meanwhile Santorini and Columbo continue to rock the Aegean ! A lot of earthquakes this week! Even parts of the caldera collapsed in the sea!
Look up the BBC docudrama Atlantis:End Of A World,Birth Of A Legend;it's 14 years old as it came out during the spring or summer of 2011,but it is a good docudrama depicting an ultra-plinian volcanic eruption that would have ranked between 7 & 8 on the Volcanic Explosivity Index that brought the Bronze Age & the Bronze Age civilizations,cultures,and the local,regional & global economies at the time to a cataclysmic end,and ushered in the Iron Age and several Iron Age civilizations,and a new local,regional,and global economy & new cultures being established.
The Santorini Caldera was once called the Theira during the Late Bronze Age and had destroyed the Ancient Minoan Empire in a single day and night,and was the inspiration for the Ancient Greek Philosopher Plato's mythical tale of Atlantis 1,500 years after the cataclysm had occurred.
It was one of the most violent volcanic eruptions in recorded human history;
3 times larger that Krackatoa,a 100 times larger than Mt. St. Hellens,and more than 34,000 times more powerful than the atomic bombs;that were dropped on Hiroshima & Nagasaki,at the end of WW2.
Awesome.
Can you do an episode on the Coso and Little Lake area please?
Yes please! I live in Olancha! I've been wondering the same thing!
Thank you! Was disappointed Coso was overlooked. Still seismically and geothermally active.
Why are the captions so bad? Littered with missing letters
I've been wondering the same thing. Google owns RUclips so there's no reason for such an archaic algorithm when they have advanced tech and AI. How does it mistake 705,000 for 75,000 when the word "hundred" was clear as day? How's rhyolite lava mistaken for rolly lava? I feel bad for deaf people and can only hope they have some kind of better accessibility assistance with RUclips videos than the captions provided.
@@WildAlchemicalSpirit Not to mention the times it spelled "pyroclastic flow" as "pyrotic flu"
@@AaronGeo lol 🤣👍
WOW 52 MINUTES VIDEO
An excellent compilation.
Can you discuss the impact of geothermal powerplant activity upon the magma chambers into which we are pumping water? This has to be a cooling factor; I am wondering whether this is an exhaustible resource (i.e. we cool the magma to the point where the generated steam isn't energetic enough to be worth doing) and whether this materially affects the behavior of the magma chamber (i.e. can we simultaneously extract energy and "pacify" magma chambers which are potentially dangerous such as those in Iceland.
What about the Coso Volcanic Field in southern Inyo County? It's still very seismically and geothermally active.
What is the difference between maars and craters? Both are depressions?
Maars are still craters, but specifically created by phreatic explosions as opposed to lava/pumice/ash eruptions
THANK YOU! @elsongs I was wondering that for a long time
Nevermind! Sadly, I'm pretty sure that these are clear-cut areas.
What are the geometric formations scattered around the name "Viola" near Lassen Peak (at 10:23)? They must be pretty big... They don't look natural, but they don't look like human constructions, either. Are they relatively recent rock formations? If so, how were they created? They are markedly different from their surroundings, which makes me wonder if they are a type of rock that's harder than the more eroded rocky terrain nearby.
Great, and Yreka, CA is Safe from Volcanics mostly.
My dreams have always looked like the long valley volcano simulation. The future.
I want to hike an active volcano.
Get yourself some really tough boots. I hiked 14 miles of lava fields in Hawaii and it really did a number on the soles of my Solomon hiking shoes! They were quite chewed up. Also, you might want to wear gloves and potentially even some knee guards. I saw the results of what happens when you trip and fall on the glassy, shardy volcanic material as I passed by some of the other hikers. Bleeding hands and knees. Granted, not every volcanic field is quite as glassy as it is in Hawaii.
@WildAlchemicalSpirit thank you. I will take your advice. And also get.some booties for my dog.
@rogerj.fugere3570 I think some of the areas don't even allow dogs in unless you hike in from a back way and not through a national park entrance. Bring plenty of water and food too because there's nothing otherwise.
🤘🏼🌋This was definitely ⚡The master-magma-mix ⚡of killer calderas in California🌋🤘🏼
When the locals don’t know they’re on top of a volcano.
🌋
So if medicine lake goes off will we call it bad medicine?
0:12 End Joy
Indeed
Long Valley is volcanic bc of the Normal Fault that exists at the western edge of the rift.
🙂👍♥️
It's s*** like this is exactly why I wake and bake.....😂 Still not moving out of Cali
Is that why natives say inyo face?
Oh yea one out of 5 new massive steam vents pumping. Is near Borrade lake, another is this side of mountain ridge of the Guisers. Geo thermal power plant. Another North of uperLake. One by horse shoe bay. Another between Mt. Hanna add Konocti cinder mt. Never Stop.... thankyou.
And just obvious Mt. Konocti. On a sunny blue ski day. Has all most all the time steam clouds over head.
I'm so happy I no longer live in California.
You pronounce Mt Shasta funny.
I really enjoyed this information about volcanoes in my state. However, you continue to mispronounce Mt. Shasta. It’s a flat “a” not a hard a. Mt. ShaaaSTA, with the first “a” sounding like bad.
I learned the opposite and I live in California. The first "a" in Shasta should sound like the "a" in "water" not like the "a" in "bad". I think in the end it really doesn't matter though. Toe-mah-toe, toe-may-toe. 🤷♀️
Just for the record, the indigenous name for Mt. Shasta is "Uytaahkoo" (pronounced Wee-tah-ah-koh) which is from the Shasta language.
"Uytaahkoo" roughly translates to "Great Spirit Mountain" or "Mountain of the Spirits", reflecting the deep spiritual significance of the mountain to the indigenous peoples of the region.
However, it's worth noting that the mountain was considered sacred by many Native American tribes in the region, not just the Shasta, and some may have had other names for it.
@@WildAlchemicalSpirit Considering you live in California, I believe you. And it does matter. In Texas, English speakers wreak terrible butchery on the Spanish language. In Houston there's a street named San Felipe. It should be pronounced Sahn Fe-LEE-pay, but most Anglos say San FILL-lip-ee, or even worse, San Fell-LEAP.
@@WildAlchemicalSpirit I don't care. And I don't believe in spirits, gods, or other such nonsense. That crap is for ignorant people who believe in spirits, gods, and other such nonsense.
@@SkepticalRaptor Not so, we don't need to believe the myths to enjoy them.
The 10 Active Volcanoes in California and one of them (along with one in Oregon) will light off when the Cascadia Subduction Zone slips.
No
Thank you so very much! For settling our fears. Yet living here for so many years and so many vents, ( LACK OF EARTH QUAKES) Is un settling! The steam vents obviously me and others havenever been seen as massive today.... Thank you again and the 4.7 was a wake up with out after shocks.....
My tribe records clear lake eruptions. Bear clan tsera meaning Sarah species non humans in Isaiah 51:1-12. Bear clan gods who were gods of Egypt hosea12:8-13:9 as confirmed by genetics.
We are from all norte California as bear clan monument is in american canyon northern California for which USA was named. That's right. Lol. But America means yellow lotus in shoshoni and all pre siberian native languages. That's why south America is America Also because lotuses grow there too. The main food of royals Egyptians buddhists original jews and all red people ( pre siberian natives who are o negative red eyed as rev2:18 says oh yeah. God is a strange way to say lemurs who have zero monkey or ape or homonid DNA just shrew lemur)
this is not a comment
The most uninformed illiterate people I have ever encountered weren't from some southern state, they were from N. California, Wyoming runs a close second.
The voice pisses me off.
You have issues.
Funny cause your low mental capacity should.