Updated
Updated · USGS (.gov) · Jun 13
Firehole River Turns Milky 5 Kilometers Downstream After Biscuit Basin Hydrothermal Explosion
Updated
Updated · USGS (.gov) · Jun 13

Firehole River Turns Milky 5 Kilometers Downstream After Biscuit Basin Hydrothermal Explosion

3 articles · Updated · USGS (.gov) · Jun 13

Summary

  • June 13 views from Yellowstone's Midway Geyser bridge showed the Firehole River running milky rather than clear.
  • A small hydrothermal explosion at Biscuit Basin sent suspended sediment into the river, discoloring water about 5 kilometers, or 3.1 miles, downstream.
  • The image documents an immediate visible effect of the blast in one of Yellowstone's hydrothermal areas, with the sediment plume extending beyond the basin itself.

Insights

A Yellowstone river suddenly turned milky. What does this strange event reveal about the supervolcano sleeping beneath?
After three explosions in two years, can scientists finally predict what Yellowstone's active Biscuit Basin will do next?
New sensors captured a Yellowstone eruption in detail. What volcanic secrets are they about to unlock?