Sudden Volcanic Eruption Leaves Dozens Stranded In Japan

Just put 'alcogon' on google scholar. Same results. As I thought, something you pulled out of your ass.
If you were in a College debate, or even High School you would be kicked out of the debate stating, "As I thought, something you pulled out of your ass".

Old Crock, you are really quick to use any sort of cheap shot to attack someone, like stating people would get kicked off a debate team if we followed the rules of debate.

Old Crock, you are nothing more than a mean troll hypocrite, unable to validate one of your own posts. I should count the amount you ran from today, what was is 7?

First, I am not an academic. I am a sawmill, construction, and steel mill millwright. I have had to deal with many stupid people in my life, and have little patience with people that don't bother to do any kind of research before they make statements. Even less patience with people that pull bullshit out of their asses and expect people to accept that. As far as validating my posts, you will find many of them with links to sources like the USGS, and peer reviewed journals. Something I have found notebly lacking in your posts.
 
By the way, Billy Bob, St. Helens is a stratavolcano that is the result of a subduction zone. Yellowstone is a caldera that is the result of a plume. No connection at all between them.
No connection if you forget you could drive from one to the other, I bet there are lot more connections besides the tiny bit of land that separates them.

Very stupid statement. One is on the West side of Washington state, the other on the Wyoming-Idaho border. That is several hundred miles of land between them.
Thank you for qualifying your statement as being "Very stupid statement"

Now this is what I mean by really silly people. You just posted that there was only a tiny bit of land between St. Helens and Yellowstone. There is several hundred miles between them. Stating that several hundred miles is a tiny bit of land is a very stupid statement. But that is what we have come to expect from you.
 
By the way, Billy Bob, St. Helens is a stratavolcano that is the result of a subduction zone. Yellowstone is a caldera that is the result of a plume. No connection at all between them.
No connection if you forget you could drive from one to the other, I bet there are lot more connections besides the tiny bit of land that separates them.

Very stupid statement. One is on the West side of Washington state, the other on the Wyoming-Idaho border. That is several hundred miles of land between them.
Thank you for qualifying your statement as being "Very stupid statement"

Now this is what I mean by really silly people. You just posted that there was only a tiny bit of land between St. Helens and Yellowstone. There is several hundred miles between them. Stating that several hundred miles is a tiny bit of land is a very stupid statement. But that is what we have come to expect from you.
Oh, I am so sorry Old Crock, I was obviously thinking bigger than your brain can handle, Can I quote you? I will so don't answer.

"You just posted that there was only a tiny bit of land between St. Helens and Yellowstone. There is several hundred miles between them. Stating that several hundred miles is a tiny bit of land is a very stupid statement."

Yep, that is what I said, that is what us on the message boards call, "trolling". Its a bit more sophisticated than when Old Crock trolls, so it went right over Old Crocks skull.

Several hundred is obviously not a thousand, more than a few? Too funny, yea, between here and there is a tiny bit of land, considering the magnitude of damage an eruption at Yellowstone will cause.

Worst case scenario, Washington, Oregon, and California get blanketed in fallout from the eruption. Even in the best scenarios if Yellowstone erupts that sets off Earthquakes in California, all the way up the coast.

Scientists are researching this right now, actually they state they need more money cause they do not know enough.

So when I state, its a tiny piece of land that separates Mt. St. Helens and Yellowstone, in the context of the complexity of Teutonic plate movement, its tiny, insignificant.
 
By the way, Billy Bob, St. Helens is a stratavolcano that is the result of a subduction zone. Yellowstone is a caldera that is the result of a plume. No connection at all between them.
No connection if you forget you could drive from one to the other, I bet there are lot more connections besides the tiny bit of land that separates them.

Old Crock is a crock.. There is always a triradiate fracture around all volcanoes. It is present at Mt St Helens and every strata volcano on earth. The upwelling force of the magma creates them. The weakest point in the earths crust will always create gaps where magma can flow.

St Helens is in a position between the shield volcanoes of the North American Plate subduction zone and Yellowstone.

I guess the subduction zone does not create its own subterranean pathways to move lava as the crust melts and is forced into the earth mantle. :oops-28:
 
Annals of the Former World, John McPhee.

This book is the limit of my knowledge, I just figured, in the context of the entire earth, Yellowstone is relatively close to Mt. St. Helens.
 
What does any of this have to do with BIlly getting caught pulling the word "alcogon" out of his ass? You know, the same place where he gets nearly all of his "science".

Billy, we await your documentation concerning the previously unknown secret passages between Yellowstone and Mt. St. Helens. If you didn't just pull that out of your ass as well, it should be easy. For example, being that moving magma creates earthquakes, there should be an obvious earthquake footprint tracking those tunnels, should those tunnels exist. So show us that footprint.

And please also tell us the specific field of your Ph.D, and the university you attended. You'd think a "solar scientist" like you would be proud to expand upon his credentials. It tends to make one think you're a WUWT parrot who lied about being a scientist.
 

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