Transformation

March 30th, 2008

Kilauea Volcano has made a fantastic transformation over the last year, with the Puu Oo crater complex falling apart in June 07, a new fissure zone and lava flow emerging in July 07, and the reawakening of Halemaumau crater in March 08. We are thrilled to have recorded the unique eruptive signature from the first eruption in the Kilauea caldera since 1982, and the first explosion in Halemaumau since 1924! But perhaps even more impressive for me is the massive amounts of infrasound emerging from this new vent. The dominant signal – Pele’s Chant – has a nearly monochromatic period of 2 seconds, well beyond our detection treshold. There is ocassional audible sound near the vent possibly associated with rocks breaking up. There is always an audio signal in an erupting volcano - if you get close enough to a fresh lava flow you can hear the fresh skin crackle – but it takes a lot of power to produce the really deep sounds! So now we have infrasound coming in from three different regions, and with two arrays we continue to record the continuous hum of the ongoing metamorphosis of Kilauea Volcano.

Awareness

February 18th, 2008

The Pu’u O’o crater complex appears to be singing again, after a brief respite of months. Tungurahua Volcano is popping back to life, rested after its last serious eruption less than a week ago. Galeras, in Colombia,  may or may not be ringing - hard to tell in that neck of the woods. Mout St. Helens in napping. The stations in Palau, Diego Garcia, and Hualalai are healthy, the one in Volcano has a sensor down, the arrays in Ecuador are fine. Today is President’s day, a US holiday, and all is well on the Western front. No rest for the wary.

Keeping real-time infrasonic data streams alive, tuning into their significance, and turning sound bytes into knowledge, is what we do. We are sentries of sound. We listen continuously for the deep natural and man-made infrasounds of monsters – nuclear tests, volcanoes, meteors – coexisting with the grave soundscape of Earth.

And there is always something blowing up somewhere …