Videos of bison seemingly fleeing Yellowstone National Park in
Wyoming have sparked concerns among some bloggers that recent seismic
activity could trigger the eruption of the park’s so-called
supervolcano.
According to Epoch Times
, multiple videos of such
incidents have been posted online recently, one of which shows a
herd of buffalo allegedly leaving the park and “running for their
lives.” Although people behind the discussion acknowledge there’s
no way to predict when the park’s massive volcano could erupt,
they believe the reaction of the Yellowstone’s animals could
signal some kind of alert.
On March 30, Yellowstone was struck by the most powerful
earthquake it has experienced since 1980 – a 4.8 magnitude quake
that did no damage, but that some believe could be connected to
the various animals’ movements
“Whether I believe this, or whether I don’t believe the story
or not, I don’t know. I can tell you this story I saw this
morning about the buffaloes running the street … whether or not
it’s because of any activity in Yellowstone or not, I don’t
know,” said blogger Jay Lee, according to the Times.
“But I’ll tell you this, whatever the case may be, that their
running away from Yellowstone is an alert of some sort.”
Another video uploaded to YouTube, this time by self-described
“survivalist” and “search-and-rescue expert”
Tom Lupshu, claims, “Biologists aren’t sure if there’s been a
stunning decline in the herd or if other factors have skewed the
tally.” Lupshu also said that helium releases in the area
are 1,000 times above normal levels, and accused the US
Geological Survey of not reporting small quakes occurring near
the volcano.
“Herds of bison running for their lives on the public
roadways and they were not being chased or rounded up, the bison
were running down the mountain slopes onto roadways running right
past a filming crew,” he added. “They detect something
vast and deadly. The Yellowstone Supervolcano is the only thing
there that would fit the bill.”
The supervolcano – which was found last year to be 2.5 times
larger than previously thought – has not erupted in over 640,000
years, leaving some to speculate that a blast is overdue. If and
when it erupts again, the volcano could potentially spew ash over
large swathes of North America and cause trouble around the
entire planet.
"It would be a global event," Jamie Farrell of the
University of Utah told the Associated Press last year.
"There would be a lot of destruction and a lot of impacts
around the globe."
Although Farrell said scientists don’t know enough to map out the
next eruption’s likely arrival, he did say they’d know if magma
was moving towards the Earth’s surface.
In another video, Lupshu said that increased seismic activity at
Yellowstone could bring about the volcano’s eruption, but the
Geological Survey has noted such activity is currently par for
the course, and that between 1,000 and 3,000 earthquakes hit the
area every year. The agency also stated that helium releases have
“no implications about volcanic hazards.”
According to Epoch Times, the University of Utah Seismograph
Stations also downplayed fears.
“There is no evidence that a catastrophic eruption at
Yellowstone National Park (YNP) is imminent,” the service
said. “Current geologic activity at Yellowstone has remained
relatively constant since earth scientists first started
monitoring some 30 years ago. Though another caldera-forming
eruption is theoretically possible, it is very unlikely to occur
in the next thousand or even 10,000 years.
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