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November 30, 2005
Fire and ice










Mount Belinda, an active volcano on an island in Antarctica, has started to blow -- and is producing this totally awesome collision of fire and ice. There are some really gorgeous color-enhanced images coming out of NASA's Earth-monitoring satellite Terra, one of which is above.

The changes to the local environment will be quite interesting to watch. Outside of the fact that the island is home to much of the world's population of chinstrap penguins -- who are probably freaking out right now -- the melting ice will inject an enormous amount of freshwater into the ocean. (A smaller eruption in Iceland in 1996 produced a volume of freshwater outstripped only by the Amazon river.)

Volcano experts are predictably thrilled, as news@Nature notes:

"I'd give my right arm to be down there now," says John Smellie, a volcano expert at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, UK. "It's very rare that we get to make direct observations of eruptions under ice sheets."

Heh. He'd "give his right arm" to be down near A MASSIVELY UNSTABLE GEYSER of 1250-degree lava. Man, I love scientists. They're willing to risk full-body mutilation just to acquire good data. More proof that the scientific method is the finest moral product of human civilization.

Of course, Robert Frost would have loved this event too.


(Thanks to SciTech Daily for this one!)

Posted by Clive Thompson at November 30, 2005 03:11 PM

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Comments

Awesome post yo. But I must disagree with your analysis. I mean just because the scientist would love to be there, and would give his limb, does not imply that he would be there just to gather data. I would offer that just to be in the presence of such elemental brillance, to witness it firsthand, offers the experience of something beyond data. And to me it says more about human nature than the scientific method. Nonetheless, gorgeous image. And that's one of my favorite Robert Frost poems! Keep on truckin.

Posted by: Spiros Antonopoulos [TypeKey Profile Page] at December 1, 2005 2:18 PM

That is a perfectly fair analysis, sir -- indeed, some in-the-field data-collection is like an Xtreme sport, with the rush and the same grandeur! Poetic itself.

Posted by: Clive [TypeKey Profile Page] at December 1, 2005 6:56 PM

The first thing I was wondering is would there be a spot in the water where I can take off all my cloths and swim in 30 degree water, like a sweet spot between extreem cool and hot or would it fluctuate so fast that it will screw up the experience?

And 2nd wonder(ment) was what are the enviroment impllications? Would it rise water level in the oceans?

Posted by: nova9 [TypeKey Profile Page] at December 2, 2005 3:59 PM

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