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Post Info TOPIC: Heard Island


L

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Big Ben volcanic massif
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Research vessel in Antarctica captures rare footage of volcano erupting

Prof Mike Coffin from the University of Tasmania's Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies describes seeing the eruption of Big Ben, a volcanic massif located on the summit of Heard Island. Due to its remote location, eruptions are rarely glimpsed by the human eye. Scientists on board the CSIRO research vessel Investigator caught the occurrence while circling the islands on the sub-Antarctic Kerguelen Plateau as part of a 58-day voyage
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L

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RE: Heard Island
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Is this volcano on Heard Island exploding?

A volcano on Heard Island, a tiny uninhabited speck of Australian territory near Antarctica, may just be erupting.
It also may not be erupting. Nobody really knows. We contacted the Australian Antarctic Division in Hobart this afternoon, and they didnt know.

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L

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heard_isl
Credit NASA

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L

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Heard Island sits in the far southern Indian Ocean two-thirds of the way from Madagascar to Antarctica, and is closer to Antarctica than any other major landmass. At the centre of the ice-covered island are the Big Ben massif, a large section of the Earth’s crust that has been pushed up into a dense, rocky mountain by tectonic action, and an active volcano, Mawson Peak. The geologic activity that formed these features continues in the form of frequent eruptions from Mawson Peak.

73.50605E_53.10574S
Expand (1.74mb)
Credit NASA

Latitude -53.10310S, Longitude 73.52077E

The volcano’s current phase of activity began in May 2006, and it continued through December 2006, when the Terra satellite captured this image. Made with both infrared and visible light, the image shows signs of volcanic activity on December 8, 2006. A glowing dot of red on Mawson Peak is thought to be a small lava lake in the summit crater. A fresh lava flow extends 700 metres east of the crater, creating a dark blue smudge on the otherwise even field of snow, which is blue-green in this false-colour image. The rocky Big Ben Massif south of Mawson Peak similarly wrinkles the surface of the snow, though some of the apparent roughness may actually be icy clouds.

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