Scientists have underestimated
the threat of volcanic avalanches
Avalanches of ash, gas and rock that
cascade downhill during volcanic erup-
tions may be even more dangerous than
scientists had realized.
Pulses of high pressure form within
these slides, called pyroclastic flows, as a
result of turbulence, researchers report
December 15 in
Nature Communications
.
Those pressures can be far stronger than
previously estimated.
Conventional hazard assessments
probably drastically underestimate the
destructiveness of some pyroclastic flows,
says volcanologist Gert Lube of Massey
University in Palmerston North, New Zea-
land. Assessments might suggest a flow
will only burst windows, “when actually,
the pressures are so strong, they knock
down the walls of the building,” he says.
Due to pyroclastic flows’ violent nature,
researchers often have to estimate pres-
sures using computer simulations based
on deposits left by past flows. For a more
direct assessment, Lube and colleagues
reproduced smaller versions of the flows
in experiments. The team also analyzed
the first measurements of pressures in
natural flows, collected in 2019 when New
Zealand’s Whakaari volcano erupted, and
flows engulfed infrasound sensors.
Pressures in the flows oscillated rhyth-
mically, as volcanic particles clustered
into cascading waves and trains of rolling
eddies. These pressure pulses would
successively damage obstacles like blows
from a jackhammer, Lube says. The pulses
sometimes smashed more than three
times as hard as average estimates in
conventional simulations.
— Nikk Ogasa
HUMANS & SOCIETY
Homo sapiens
fossils in East Africa
get pushed further back in time
Fossils of the oldest known
Homo sapiens
individual in East Africa are more ancient
than previously thought.
A partial
H. sapiens
skull and associ-
ated skeletal parts found in 1967 near
Ethiopia’s Omo River date to at least
233,000 years ago, pushing back the age
of the fossils, known as Omo 1, by 36,000
years or more. An age well exceeding
200,000 years fits with recent discoveries
suggesting that
H. sapiens
evolved across
Africa starting about 300,000 years ago
(
SN: 7/8/17 & 7/22/17, p. 6
).
A volcanic eruption about 233,000
years ago left a layer of ash atop the
sediment that yielded Omo I, say volca-
nologist Céline Vidal of the University of
Cambridge and colleagues. That ash layer
has a chemical fingerprint matching that
of a volcanic crater 350 kilometers north-
east of the fossil site. Dating of hardened
ash at the volcanic crater led to the new
minimum age estimate for the fossils, the
scientists report January 12 in
Nature
.
Another ash layer lying near the fossil-
bearing sediment, but with uncertain ori-
gins, provided the previous age estimate
of about 197,000 years old.
— Bruce Bower
ATOM & COSMOS
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