Updated
Updated · Space.com · May 11
Landsat 9 Captures Shivelyuch Melting Snow on April 23 as Heat Lingers After 2023 Eruption
Updated
Updated · Space.com · May 11

Landsat 9 Captures Shivelyuch Melting Snow on April 23 as Heat Lingers After 2023 Eruption

3 articles · Updated · Space.com · May 11
  • April 23 Landsat 9 images show Russia's Shivelyuch volcano carving dark, snow-free channels through its slopes, revealing volcanic heat still escaping across Kamchatka's frozen landscape.
  • A growing lava dome inside the crater is driving part of that heat, while collapses can unleash pyroclastic flows that spread hot ash and rock down the volcano's flanks.
  • Those deposits can retain heat for months or years, and NASA says some scars in the new imagery may still reflect energy left from Shivelyuch's massive 2023 eruption.
  • Shivelyuch, Kamchatka's northernmost active volcano, is among Earth's most active, with satellites regularly tracking ash deposits, heat signatures and hot-rock avalanches.
While satellites watch a Russian volcano melt snow from within, how are nearby communities preparing for the next big eruption?
Beyond the danger, could the immense geothermal heat from Russia's snow-melting volcano be harnessed for human benefit?
As AI learns to predict eruptions, how much warning time can we expect before a major volcanic event?