Posted on 08/02/2015 7:33:08 PM PDT by markomalley
Le Piton de la Fournaise, one of the most active volcanoes in the world and a main tourist attraction on the Réunion island, was evacuated Thursday as authorities warned of an imminent eruption.
Reunion island is where debris believed to be from the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 was found on Wednesday.
Aviation experts and investigators have expressed near certainty that the piece of barnacle-encrusted debris came from Flight 370, which disappeared 16 months ago while carrying 239 people from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
The Reunion Island government imposed a ban on access to the Piton de la Fournaise volcano, including by helicopter, after an eruption at 10am local time Friday, according to media reports. It ranks with other active volcanoes in Hawaii, Italy and Antarctica.
As the eruption continued today, the discovery of two Chinese-branded water bottles and a cleaning product from Indonesia near where the plane part was discovered made third place on Linfos website.
This is a long eruptive fissure because at the surface it is about [0.62 miles] long, explained Aline Peltier, a scientist at the Piton de la Fournaise Volcano Observatory.
It is a spectacular sight. Naturally, something so majestic as a volcano eruption cannot leave anybody completely unimpressed, but since many Reunion citizens have lived there all their lives, they now know what to do in case of a new eruption and so they can act fast, so that nobody gets hurt. Usually after a day we only have one.
The volcano is not seen as unsafe because the lava flows down the east side of the mountain through an uninhabited area called the Grand Brule, or the Big Burned, toward the sea. The molten lava shoots up into the air like a fountain, whispered Yannick Parrel, a thirty-year-old helicopter pilot who flies tourists over Reunions captivating landscape in a tour that typically ends with a broad circle around the volcanos caldera. The last times the volcano threatened the population was in 1977 and 1986.
Piton de la Fournaise is also incredibly useful for research, because the high frequency of eruptions provides locals with extensive research material.
The Peak of the Furnace has been spewing out more gases than usual.
Coincidence? I think not.
They’ll **** if it starts spitting out Boeing 777 parts.
Strange timing, to say the least.
[Coincidence? I think not.]
Have to let nully be the deciding judge.
Nut-job Conspiracy Theory Ping!
To get onto The Nut-job Conspiracy Theory Ping List you must threaten to report me to the Mods if I don't add you to the list...
So the plane is causing the eruption?
I know its not a laughing matter but that was damn funny !
More like they need an eruption to cover the parts...
You are kidding, right? Please tell me you are kidding.
Noticed from a map there were several islands about the same size to the north and east of Reunion. Couldn’t find names. There was also mention of non inhabited smaller islands in area. Are any of these being search for debris?
No place - not even Free Republic - is immune from those who see conspiracies everywhere.
Maybe I don’t get out much but I never heard of the Réunion Island until the broken jet wing washed up on shore. Now it’s in the news again because of an “imminent eruption”? Weird. Really weird.
I think he’s joking.
The Force is unbalanced.
Next thing, he won’t be threatening to report you to the mods!
Reunion Island’s hot spot has its history:
Plate tectonics has been on the curriculum for a while now. Most people are fairly familiar with the theory; the Earth’s crust - or lithosphere - is broken up into different plates which move around on the very hot, viscous substance beneath. This movement is driven by the heat of the Earth’s core, causing the viscous substance beneath the Earth’s crust to flow and move the plates above, like pieces of toast floating in a massive bowl of hot beans. Plates can move closer together or further away from each other. Over millions of years, these movements define our continents. Plates coming together can form mountain ridges, whereas plates moving away from each other can form oceans. On a smaller timescale, plate tectonics is responsible for earthquakes, volcanoes and tidal waves.
Now, scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography have identified a new force driving plate tectonics: plumes of hot magma swelling up from deep inside the Earth’s core, up to 2,500 kilometres deep. Published in the journal Nature, the research shows that these hotspots, or “mantle plumes”, are responsible for the movement of whole continents. These plumes of incredibly hot, molten rock push against continental plates and drive their movement.
Around 70 million years ago, the tectonic plate that now includes the Indian subcontinent lay northeast of Madagascar. Suddenly, it started moving incredibly quickly - by geological standards - at 10 centimetres per year. Around the same time, a spate of huge volcanoes occurred at the Deccan Plateau, sited in the area that is now India. Molten lava was thrown over around 1.5 million square kilometres and the volcanoes coincided with the mass extinction of dinosaurs, two events which some scientists think are related. Steve Cande and Dave Stegman, who led the study for Scripps Institution of Oceanography, tracked movements of continental plates throughout Earth’s history.
Their research suggests that the Indian subcontinent tectonic plate sat over a powerful mantle plume which began around 70 million years ago, around what is now the Reunion Islands. This rising mass of hot rock hit the Earth’s crust and spread out. The pushing force of the mantle plume sent the Indian plate hurtling towards what is now Asia.
The Reunion mantle plume is also thought to be responsible for the mass volcanism at the Deccan Plateau. Cande and Stegman also think that the Reunion mantle plume caused the African tectonic plate to slow down for around 5 million years. After the plume subsided, the Indian tectonic plate slowed to a more normal geological movement of around a few centimetres each year, whereas the African plate sped up. The movement of these two plates in sync, always countering each other, provides strong evidence that a powerful mantle plume was responsible for their motion.
The area around Reunion Islands is still a hotspot for volcanic activity, even though the plume has now spluttered out. Could mantle plumes be responsible for more of our present mountain ranges, volcanoes and continents? Whilst not all scientists agree that mantle plumes are responsible for the movement of whole continents, the latest research should shed new light on the way we think about the Earth’s geological features.
- See more at: http://www.earthtimes.org/nature/hotspots-driving-tectonic-plate-movement/1124/#sthash.7eRRDMLG.dpuf
Read more at http://www.earthtimes.org/nature/hotspots-driving-tectonic-plate-movement/1124/#U82JzjfOCZWuWzzm.99
Feed me!
That would be something! I wonder if the plane did go into the volcano.
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