after Lying Dormant for 12,000 Years,
Scientific American 11/24/25
Oh you mean like 3I/ATLAS
is doing in the heavens?
(Sending scientist scrambling)
long thought to be dormant,
sent ash nine miles into the sky
in an eruption on Sunday
Joel 2:30-31
And I will shew
wonders in the heavens
(Were getting images of 3I/ATLAS
like that one above from armatures on the ground
but NASA's images are
"fuzzy" these days?
And people cant figure out why that is?)
and in the earth,
blood, and fire,
and pillars of smoke.
31 The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and terrible day of the Lord come.
The Hayli Gubbi volcano eruption.
Im sorry
but when a volcano
that nobody ever thought
had ever erupted,
or thought
it was ever going to erupt,
erupts?
After 12,000 years?
In Ethiopia?
In a manner that it wasnt supposed to?
"A long-quiet volcano in Ethiopia spewed ash nine miles into the sky on Sunday, marking the first known major eruption from this volcano for more than 12,000 years."
“I would be really surprised if [more than 12,000 years ago] really is the last eruption date,” Biggs says."
(I'll just say this much:
There is a community t
hat isn't surprised.)
"While there have been no confirmed eruptions in that time span, satellite images hint that the volcano may have recently burped out lava, she says."
"Either way, this eruption is highly unusual. Hayli Gubbi is a shield volcano, like Hawaii’s Mauna Loa. These volcanoes are known for oozing lava flows, not expelling giant columns of ash."
“To see a big eruption column, like a big umbrella cloud, is really rare in this area,” Biggs says."
(So it's obviously already doing something that would be considered rare, but you are going to be surprised if it's last eruption was 12,000 years ago?)
"Hayli Gubbi sits in the East African Rift Zone, a region where the African and Arabian plates are pulling apart at a rate of about 0.4 to 0.6 inches a year, says Arianna Soldati, a volcanologist at North Carolina State University. If the two plates keep moving apart, then eventually the Arabian Sea and rift valley will become a new ocean."
"As the Earth’s crust pulls apart, it stretches and thins, and hot rocks rise up from the mantle, melting into magma toward the surface."
"Lava flows from the volcano could also reveal if Hayli Gubbi truly was quiet for 12,000 years."
“It really just shows how understudied this region is,” Biggs says.
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