Fortunately it is a slow motion event and will need millennia to
mature and then rupture. Perhaps it will stall out long before that.
Yet it is a sobering reminder that in the long term we will need to
provide for this risk with direct escape into space and into the
Earth's crust itself. The later is possible today although better
material solutions will be welcome. Escape into space merely
requires the fabrication of MFEVs (google this blog) and the
building of appropriate space habitats. Besides that may already be
well done.
It is still an impressive discovery and adds more to our knowledge of
the Altoplano itself which is already highly unusual. We can presume
that this process is partly central to the altitudes seen here in
addition to the obvious plate activity.
The Altoplano is one of those special places on Earth in which
mankind has succeeded and prospered and showed us much more of our
human potential. Such a list includes the Arctic and the Sahara as
two other extremes. One is almost tempted to develop a
classification system and to work up a long list of human biomes.
The real challenge is to acquire the internal data, particularly of
plant usage.
Researchers ID
unique geological 'sombrero' uplift in South America
by Staff Writers
San Diego CA (SPX) Oct 12, 2012
Scientists
at Scripps Institutionof Oceanography at UC San
Diego have used 20 years of satellite data to reveal a geological
oddity unlike any seen on Earth.
At the border of
Argentina, Bolivia and Chile sits the Altiplano-Puna plateau in the
central Andes region, home to the largest active magma body in
Earth's continental crust and known for a long history of massive
volcanic eruptions.
A
study led by Yuri Fialko of Scripps and Jill Pearse of the
Alberta Geological Survey has revealed that magma is
forming a big blob in the middle of the crust, pushing up the earth's
surface across an area 100 kilometers (62 miles) wide, while
the surrounding area sinks, leading to a unique geological phenomenon
in the shape of a Mexican hat that the researchers have described as
the "sombrero uplift."
Since
the magma motion is happening at a great depth and at a fairly slow
rate-the earth's surface rises at about a centimeter per year or
roughly the rate fingernails grow-there is no immediate danger of
a volcanic outpouring, the researchers said.
The details of the
study, which was funded by the National Science Foundation, are
published in the October 12 issue of the journal Science.
"It's
a subtle motion, pushing up little by little every day, but it's this
persistence that makes this uplift unusual. Most other magmatic
systems that we know about show episodes of inflation and deflation,"
said Fialko, a professor of geophysics in the Cecil H. and Ida M.
Green Institute ofGeophysics and Planetary Physics at
Scripps.
The researchers have
attributed the observed steady motion and sombrero-shaped deflection
of the earth's surface to a large blob of magma, called a "diapir"
in geological terms, forming on top of the Altiplano-Puna magma body.
Diapirs have been studied using geologic records in rocks frozen many
millions of years ago, but the new study is the first to identify an
active magma diapir rising through the crust at present day.
Fialko said a similar
uplift phenomenon is occurring near Socorro, New Mexico, but at a
much lower rate.
"Satellite data
and computer models allowed us to make the important link between
what's observed at the surface and what's happening with the magma
body at depth," said Fialko.
Fialko said the
sombrero uplift could provide insights into the initial stages of
massive magmatic events leading to the formation of large calderas.
Such "super-volcano" events erupt thousands of cubic
kilometers of magma into the atmosphere and can affect local and
global climates.
Compared
with the Icelandic volcano eruption in 2011 that
spewed large amounts of ash into the atmosphere and disrupted global
air travel, Fialko said, a super-volcano event would be thousands of
times greater.
"Those were truly
disaster-type events," said Fialko. "Fortunately such
events haven't happened in human history, but we know they did happen
in the Altiplano-Puna area in the past."
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