What could this mean for Yellowstone?
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What could this mean for Yellowstone?
There has bound to be someone here who knows something about Yellowstone.
Over the past few years, I can't find any earthquakes above 3.0 in Yellowstone, but in the hour there has been a 3.2. Could this come as a possible sign to some major changes in the caldera? The quake was in the eastern part just above the lake, still in the caldera. What does anyone have to say about what this might mean?
Magnitude 3.2 - YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, WYOMING
2006 February 26 01:08:20 UTC
A minor earthquake occurred at 01:08:20 (UTC) on Sunday, February 26, 2006. The magnitude 3.2 event has been located in YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, WYOMING. The hypocentral depth was poorly constrained. (This event has been reviewed by a seismologist.)
Earthquake Details
Magnitude 3.2
Date-Time Sunday, February 26, 2006 at 01:08:20 (UTC)
= Coordinated Universal Time
Saturday, February 25, 2006 at 6:08:20 PM
= local time at epicenter
Location 44.663°N, 110.434°W
Depth 0.3 km (~0.2 mile) (poorly constrained)
Region YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, WYOMING
Distances 47 km (29 miles) SSE (152°) from Gardiner, MT
53 km (33 miles) E (90°) from West Yellowstone, MT
55 km (34 miles) SW (225°) from Cooke City-Silver Gate, MT
451 km (280 miles) NNE (15°) from Salt Lake City, UT
Location Uncertainty horizontal +/- 0.7 km (0.4 miles); depth +/- 2.5 km (1.6 miles)
Parameters Nst= 24, Nph= 24, Dmin=11 km, Rmss=0.38 sec, Gp= 47°,
M-type=local magnitude (ML), Version=3
Source University of Utah Seismograph Stations
Event ID uu00007613
Over the past few years, I can't find any earthquakes above 3.0 in Yellowstone, but in the hour there has been a 3.2. Could this come as a possible sign to some major changes in the caldera? The quake was in the eastern part just above the lake, still in the caldera. What does anyone have to say about what this might mean?
Magnitude 3.2 - YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, WYOMING
2006 February 26 01:08:20 UTC
A minor earthquake occurred at 01:08:20 (UTC) on Sunday, February 26, 2006. The magnitude 3.2 event has been located in YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, WYOMING. The hypocentral depth was poorly constrained. (This event has been reviewed by a seismologist.)
Earthquake Details
Magnitude 3.2
Date-Time Sunday, February 26, 2006 at 01:08:20 (UTC)
= Coordinated Universal Time
Saturday, February 25, 2006 at 6:08:20 PM
= local time at epicenter
Location 44.663°N, 110.434°W
Depth 0.3 km (~0.2 mile) (poorly constrained)
Region YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, WYOMING
Distances 47 km (29 miles) SSE (152°) from Gardiner, MT
53 km (33 miles) E (90°) from West Yellowstone, MT
55 km (34 miles) SW (225°) from Cooke City-Silver Gate, MT
451 km (280 miles) NNE (15°) from Salt Lake City, UT
Location Uncertainty horizontal +/- 0.7 km (0.4 miles); depth +/- 2.5 km (1.6 miles)
Parameters Nst= 24, Nph= 24, Dmin=11 km, Rmss=0.38 sec, Gp= 47°,
M-type=local magnitude (ML), Version=3
Source University of Utah Seismograph Stations
Event ID uu00007613
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Brent wrote:If there are a series of quakes(especially 5 or higher), then I'd start to get concerned... but I wouldn't worry about one magnitude 3.
Exactly. We've had stronger earthquakes than a 3.2 occur in VA - and there is NOTHING that is tectonically exciting about Virginia. A few 5s within a week or two of each other would start to scare me, but nothing less.
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Virginia isn't Yellowstone though. Yellowstone is a super volcano, over due for an eruption. There is a difference between ground movement and intense pressure built up underground waiting to get out in a massive eruption. Especially when there hasn't been any 3.0s+ at Yellowstone in the past few years.
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