The Tonga volcanic eruption reshaped the seafloor in mind-boggling ways
Date:
Thu, 07 Sep 2023 18:00:00 +0000
Description:
The Hunga Tonga volcano eruption triggered lightning and a tsunami. Tonga Geological Services via NOAA Immense flows traveled up to 60 miles away, damaging the region's underwater infrastructure. The post The Tonga volcanic eruption reshaped the seafloor in mind-boggling ways appeared first on
Popular Science .
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The Hunga Tonga volcano eruption triggered lightning and a tsunami. Tonga Geological Services via NOAA
On January 15, 2022, the drowned caldera under the South Pacific isles of Hunga Tonga and Hunga Haapai in Tonga blew up. The volcanic eruption shot gas and ash 36 miles up into Earths mesosphere, higher than the plume from any other volcano on record. The most powerful explosion observed on Earth in modern history unleashed a tsunami that reached Peru and a sonic boom heard
as far as Alaska.
New research shows that when the huge volume of volcanic ash, dust, glass
fell back into the water, it reshaped the seafloor in a dramatic fashion. For the first time, scientists have reconstructed what might have happened
beneath the Pacifics violently strewn waves. According to a paper published
in Science today, all that material flowed underwater for dozens of miles.
These processes have never been observed before, says study author Isobel Yeo , a marine volcanologist at the UKs National Oceanography Centre.
About 45 miles from the volcano, the eruption cut off a seafloor fiber-optic cable . For Tongans and rescuers, the broken cable was a major inconvenience that severely disrupted the islands internet. For scientists, the abrupt severance of internet traffic provided a timestamp of when something touched the cable: around an hour and a half after the eruption.
The cut also alerted scientists to the fact that the eruption had disrupted the seafloor, which isnt easy to spot.We cant see it from satellites, says Yeo. We actually have to go there and do a survey. So in the months after the eruption, Yeo and her fellow researchers set out to fish clues from the surrounding waters and piece them back together.
A Tongan charter boat owner named Branko Sugar had caught the initial
eruption with a mobile phone camera, giving an exact time when volcanic
ejecta began to fall into the water. Several months later, the boat RV Tangaroa sailed from New Zealand to survey the seafloor and collect volcanic flow samples. Unlike in much of the ocean , the seafloor around Tonga had already been mapped, allowing scientists to corroborate changes to the topography.
[Related: The centuries-long quest to map the seafloors hidden secrets ]
The scene researchers reconstructed, had it unfolded above ground, might fit neatly into Roland Emmerich disaster film. The volcano moved as much matter
in a few hours as the worlds rivers delivered into the oceans in a whole
year. These truly immense flows traveled more than 60 miles from their
origin, carving out gullies as tall as skyscrapers.
When the volcano blew, it spewed out immense quantities of rock, ash, glass, and gas that fell back to earth. This is bog-standard for such eruptions, and it typically produces the fast-moving pyroclastic flows that menace anything in their path. But over Hunga TongaHunga Haapai, that falling mass had
nowhere to go but out to sea. Satellite imagery of the January 2022 eruption. NASA Worldview, NOAA/NESDIS/STAR
Its that Goldilocks spot of dropping huge amounts of really dense material straight down into the ocean, onto a really steep slope, eroding extra material, says Michael Clare , a marine geologist at the National Oceanographic Centre and another author. It bogs up, it becomes more dense, and it just really goes.
Scientists estimated the material fanned out from Hunga TongaHunga Haapai at 75 miles per houras fast as, or faster than, the speed limit of most U.S. interstate highways. If correct, thats 50 percent faster than any other underwater flow recorded on the planet. That rushing earth gushed back up underwater slopes as tall as mountains.
Its like seeing a snow avalanche, thinking youre safe on the mountain next to it, and this thing just comes straight up against you, says Clare.
These underwater flows, according to the researchers, had never been observed before. But understanding volcanic impacts on the seafloor is about more than scientific curiosity. In the last two centuries, weve laid vital infrastructure below the water: first for telegraph cables, then telephone lines, and now optical fibers that carry the internet.
Trying to prepare a single cable for an eruption of this scale is like trying to prepare for being struck by a trainit cant really be done. Instead, a
surer way to protect communications is to lay more cables, ensuring that one disaster wont break all connectivity.
[Related: Mixing volcanic ash with meteorites may have jump-started life on Earth ]
In many parts of the globe, thats already the case. Fishing accidents break cables all the time, without much lasting effect. If, for instance, the world experienced a repeat of the 1929 earthquake-induced landslide that cut off cables off Newfoundland, we probably wouldnt notice too much: There are
plenty of other routes for internet traffic to run between Europe and North America.
As a global map of seafloor cables shows, though, that isnt true everywhere. In Tonga in 2022, a single severed cable all but entirely cut the archipelago off from the internet. Many other islands, especially in the developing
world, are similarly vulnerable.
And those cables are of great value to geologists, too. Without having the cables, wed probably still be in the dark and wouldnt know these sorts of events happen on the scale that they do, says Clare.
The post The Tonga volcanic eruption reshaped the seafloor in mind-boggling ways appeared first on Popular Science . Articles may contain affiliate links which enable us to share in the revenue of any purchases made.
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Link to news story:
https://www.popsci.com/environment/tonga-eruption-seafloor-fiber-cables/
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