Imperturbable Me.

Photo
xenophonspeaks:

WARNING: Geology/volcano rant ahead.
Let me just explain something AMA-FUCK-AZING to you. First of all, I scanned this figure from a book I own called Volcanoes In Human History: The Far-Reaching Effects of Major Eruptions, by Jelle Zeilinga de Boer and Donald Theodore Sanders.
This figure is a schematic comparison of the volume of volcanic materials emitted during several well-known eruptions (which are discussed in the book). It’s a great reflection of the Volcanic Explosivity Index, or VEI.
Tambora, the second biggest circle, is the largest eruption to ever occur in recorded history. It rates at a 7/8 on the VEI, and ejected 50 cubic kilometers of material into the atmosphere on eruption. It resulted in the deaths of 70,000 people, and caused an entire year in 1815 to be completely without summer, killing thousands worldwide when crops failed and disease was rampant.
Toba, by comparison, was the largest eruption that we’ve so far found evidence of in history ever, and it did so 74,000 years ago— right around the time of the last ice age. It rates at a 8/8 on the VEI, and ejected 2,800 cubic kilometers of material. Through DNA analysis, we can tell how many people populated the earth at a given time. At the time of Toba’s eruption, temperatures on earth dropped by 10 degrees Celsius, creating a volcanic winter and likely adding to the stress on the early human race. There’s some good evidence to support the idea that at one point in time, humanity was diminished to 10,000 people (some argue even less) in what’s known as an evolutionary bottleneck.
Toba is a supervolcano, much like the one seated in Yellowstone. There are many of them located worldwide, though most are extinct or inactive. Imagine the type of destruction that could result from one of these things going off today. Which is unlikely, but not completely unrealistic, either.
Gah, the excitement! X3 I’m not sure why volcanoes make me so ridiculously happy, but they do. I find them fascinating. Hope I didn’t bore you to death.

I wonder if humanity could take a blow as big as a supervolcano eruption. It is inevitable. O_O

xenophonspeaks:

WARNING: Geology/volcano rant ahead.

Let me just explain something AMA-FUCK-AZING to you. First of all, I scanned this figure from a book I own called Volcanoes In Human History: The Far-Reaching Effects of Major Eruptions, by Jelle Zeilinga de Boer and Donald Theodore Sanders.

This figure is a schematic comparison of the volume of volcanic materials emitted during several well-known eruptions (which are discussed in the book). It’s a great reflection of the Volcanic Explosivity Index, or VEI.

Tambora, the second biggest circle, is the largest eruption to ever occur in recorded history. It rates at a 7/8 on the VEI, and ejected 50 cubic kilometers of material into the atmosphere on eruption. It resulted in the deaths of 70,000 people, and caused an entire year in 1815 to be completely without summer, killing thousands worldwide when crops failed and disease was rampant.

Toba, by comparison, was the largest eruption that we’ve so far found evidence of in history ever, and it did so 74,000 years ago— right around the time of the last ice age. It rates at a 8/8 on the VEI, and ejected 2,800 cubic kilometers of material. Through DNA analysis, we can tell how many people populated the earth at a given time. At the time of Toba’s eruption, temperatures on earth dropped by 10 degrees Celsius, creating a volcanic winter and likely adding to the stress on the early human race. There’s some good evidence to support the idea that at one point in time, humanity was diminished to 10,000 people (some argue even less) in what’s known as an evolutionary bottleneck.

Toba is a supervolcano, much like the one seated in Yellowstone. There are many of them located worldwide, though most are extinct or inactive. Imagine the type of destruction that could result from one of these things going off today. Which is unlikely, but not completely unrealistic, either.

Gah, the excitement! X3 I’m not sure why volcanoes make me so ridiculously happy, but they do. I find them fascinating. Hope I didn’t bore you to death.

I wonder if humanity could take a blow as big as a supervolcano eruption. It is inevitable. O_O

via geologyrocksView comments
Posted on Thursday, November 11 2010.
139
Notes
  1. -electronic-reader-book liked this
  2. lalalalalamisssaigon reblogged this from theg33k and added:
    Geology/volcano rant ahead.
  3. huntersvalentine liked this
  4. jackscoresby liked this
  5. cindi-mayweather liked this
  6. thecolorbull liked this
  7. chookytime reblogged this from malloreigh
  8. geewizbo reblogged this from malloreigh
  9. rebecca-simone liked this
  10. wolftits reblogged this from malloreigh
  11. acrobaticsynonym liked this
  12. modestinvader liked this
  13. ammyretsu reblogged this from malloreigh
  14. gunstreet liked this
  15. lesfemmesfumee liked this
  16. vy-canismajoris liked this
  17. theg33k reblogged this from geologyrocks
  18. malloreigh reblogged this from theg33k
  19. teener liked this
  20. nazurazizassif liked this
  21. abibee12795 reblogged this from geologyrocks
  22. jacob liked this
  23. reaktorplayer liked this
  24. reaktorplayer reblogged this from amazingcastle
  25. amazingcastle reblogged this from geologyrocks
  26. amazingcastle liked this
  27. j3nnd3nt reblogged this from geologyrocks
  28. rosesparks reblogged this from geologyrocks
  29. ilovekashilario liked this
  30. mylaptopismurdered reblogged this from geologyrocks and added:
    I wonder if humanity could take a blow as big as a supervolcano eruption. It is inevitable. O_O
  31. meadowvale reblogged this from geologyrocks and added:
    There’s a geo book that doesn’t talk about Pinatubo on every other page? To the point it leaves it out of schematics...
  32. mercipourlevenom reblogged this from geologyrocks
  33. theexemplar reblogged this from lenxo
  34. theexemplar liked this
  35. thegullible liked this
  36. sparklelikeastar reblogged this from geologyrocks and added:
    HAHA I know this book!!!!!!!!!! I borrowed it from the Woodlands library! I was SO happy when I found it because it’d...
  37. no-method-to-the-madness reblogged this from geologyrocks and added:
    Didn’t bore me at all. I love a good explosion. :D
  38. jersey-rants liked this
  39. sericite liked this
  40. joseit liked this
  41. bradjunswick liked this
  42. urgenturchin reblogged this from geologyrocks and added:
    holy shit aerosols taking over the earth auggggggghhhhhhhhh!
  43. epnka liked this
  44. darthambiguous liked this
  45. pleasemeosaur reblogged this from geologyrocks
  46. sv liked this
  47. migeo reblogged this from geologyrocks
  48. you-had-me-at-point-blank liked this
  49. calvitron liked this
  50. mattgorman liked this
  51. Show more notesLoading...

Imperturbable Me. This crappy blog is often updated by an 18 year-old teenager known by his family and friends as Jose Dominick Guballa. He posts mostly reblogs here, but he does get the chance to produce crappy text posts about his boring life.

He is a geologist in the making, torturing his brain off at the University of the Philippines, Diliman. Pardon if he makes stupid grammatical errors; he is NOT an English major.

He adores potatoes, especially french fries. He likes to mash up his laptop's keyboard in a hefty game of o2jam, hence the URL name. He doesn't do it that often anymore, though.

Whatever happens, he dreams of graduating with honors in his field.
Ask and be enlightened. :D C'mon. :)
Previous Next