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Glass shards in Atacama Desert explained + The 1,800 young volcanoes in US southwest

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Mysterious shards of glass are strewn across miles of desert, & we finally know why
https://www.sciencealert.com/mysterious-...y-know-why

INTRO: They first came to scientists' attention about a decade ago: A mysterious field of glass fragments, scattered across Chile's Atacama Desert, and aligned in a vast corridor stretching 75 kilometers long (almost 50 miles). These strange pieces of glass, too many to be counted, are clustered in a number of sites along the desert corridor, and they take a number of shapes, some occurring in large slabs up to 50 centimeters (20 inches) across.

They have both rough and smooth features, and look as if they've been somehow folded and twisted into their current forms, scientists say. "Many have morphologies indicative of sliding, shearing, twisting, rolling, and folding (in some cases, more than twice) before being fully quenched," researchers explain in a new study analyzing the glass, led by first author and planetary geologist Peter Schultz, a professor emeritus at Brown University, Rhode Island.

Whatever it was that triggered these violent, messy transformations roughly 12,000 years ago has never been fully understood.

An early hypothesis suggested they could be the result of a large meteor exploding in the atmosphere – a giant airburst throwing fragments of hot, fiery space rock onto the desert surface, with the extra-terrestrial shrapnel melting the sand and soil on the spot. [...] scientists have also suggested they could have formed in the furnace of natural surface fires, in a different age and climate when the desert was covered in more abundant vegetation.

So which is it? According to Schultz and colleagues, the extra-terrestrial space rock hypothesis is actually the more likely explanation here... (MORE)


Let’s talk about the 1,800-plus 'young' volcanoes in the US Southwest
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/933703

INTRO: They're born. They live once, erupting for a period that might last for days, years or decades. Then, they go dark and die. This narrative describes the life of a monogenetic volcano, a type of volcanic hazard that can pose important dangers despite an ephemeral existence.

The landscape of the southwestern U.S. is heavily scarred by past eruptions of such volcanoes, and a new study marks a step toward understanding future risks for the region. The research, which will be published on Nov. 2 in the journal Geosphere, provides a broad overview of what we know -- and don't know -- about this type of volcanism in the U.S. Southwest over the past 2.58 million years, a geologic period known as the Quaternary.

During this time, more than 1,800 monogenetic volcanoes erupted in the region, according to a count covering Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and parts of California's eastern edge. Add in the Pinacate volcanic field, located mostly in the Mexican state of Sonora, bordering Arizona, and the number goes up to over 2,200, scientists say. (The volcanoes included are ones whose ages are estimated to be in the range of the Quaternary, but many have not been precisely dated.)

"Monogenetic means 'one life,'" says lead author Greg Valentine, a University at Buffalo volcanologist. "So a monogenetic volcano will erupt once, and that eruption may last for several days to several decades, but after that, the volcano is basically dead. In the United States, most volcanic hazards-related attention has rightly gone to places like Hawaii, and to the Pacific Northwest and Alaska, where we have big stratovolcanoes like Mount Rainier and Mount St. Helens, which will have many eruptive episodes over a long life, with widespread hazardous effects.

"In the past, these smaller monogenetic volcanoes really haven't been looked at from a focus on hazards; they have been instead studied mainly for what they tell us about the deep earth. Recently, however, there has been more buzz in the research community about how we need to take a look at the kinds of hazards these volcanoes might pose. My experience with the general public is that most people are surprised to know that there are so many young volcanoes in the Southwest." (MORE - details)
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