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"I could come up with 100 different theories without any evidence for them, and they would all be equally likely," said Jake Lowenstern, the Menlo Park, Calif.-based scientist in charge of Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. "Unless you have some reason to say that's what's going on, then you're not going to get a whole lot of people convinced by your speculation." Heasler said the odds of a cataclysmic eruption at Yellowstone any time soon are astonishingly remote
-- about the same as a large meteorite hitting the Earth. The last such eruption occurred 640,000 years ago. The last eruption of any kind at Yellowstone was a much smaller lava flow about 70,000 years ago. "Statistically, it would be surprising to see an eruption the next hundred years," Lowenstern said. Much more likely, he said, would be a hydrothermal explosion in which underground water encounters a hot spot and blasts through the surface. Small hydrothermal explosions producing craters a few feet wide occur in Yellowstone perhaps once or twice a year. Large hydrothermal explosions leaving craters the size of a football field occur every 200 years or so, according to a 2007 paper co-authored by Heasler, Lowenstern and others. Lowenstern said new equipment installed deep within bore holes in the park over the past two summers eventually should provide a clear picture of what's causing the earthquake swarm. That data could help scientists make better predictions about Yellowstone's geology. ___ On the Net: U.S. Geological Survey: http://www.usgs.gov/ Yellowstone Volcano Observatory: http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/yvo/
[Associated
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