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So, damn. I was hoping for a very cool report on how we would die instantly in a fiery explosion, but it’s just dumping more carbon into the atmosphere and slowly worsening climate change.
I can hear climate change deniers already. “It’s not humans, it’s the volcanoes”
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Swear to god I’ve heard this before.
That’s unfortunate. Come on Giant Meteor. ☄️
These eruptions can eject more than 1,000 cubic kilometers of material into the atmosphere Sounds like a good way of rapidly decreasing global temperatures!
These eruptions can eject more than 1,000 cubic kilometers of material into the atmosphere
Sounds like a sky problem, not a “my” problem ☝️😎
Do you think conservatives will think the dems triggered the volcano or that climate change isn’t real when the world is suddenly colder.
I think Americans always find a way to make it about them.
And killing all the world’s crops, but sacrifices must be made!
Just increase the size of our seed vault/s.
Most uplifting news I’ve heard in a while, I’ll take it
Are you magma?
I’m really kinda looking forward to it wiping out humanity.
+1 for the supervolcano.
I’m optimistic about the jobs the supervolcano eruption will create.
Don’t look down
Let’s save the world by putting tariffs on magma, making an eruption economically infeasible.
Thank god. I was hoping for an asteroid but this works too. Hurry the fuck up.
I just love the emphasis that this is not a good thing.
And I beg to differ.
Aren’t nuclear and volcanic winters the only things that could reverse climate change?
Humans die out and global warming is undone. Win/win!
Oddly enough – this one is on my End Times Bingo Card™
For real though, just throw it on the pile at this point. I’m glad i didn’t have kids, this is a hell of an inheritance the next generation is lining up for
The Phlegraean Fields, now considered one massive supervolcano, are beginning to stir, making the scientific community uneasy.
These volcanic fields, nestled just west of Naples, Italy, are among the top eight emitters of volcanic carbon dioxide worldwide.
(…) Geological phases (…)
First Phlegraean Period. (…)
It is thought that the eruption of the Archiflegreo volcano occurred about 39,280(…) years ago, erupting about 200 km³ (…) of magma (500 km³ (…) bulk volume) to produce the Campanian Ignimbrite eruption. Its Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) was 7 and it left a large part of eastern Europe covered in ash.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phlegraean_Fields