Frequent earthquakes 300 miles off the coast of Oregon signal escalation for the underwater volcano named Axial Seamount.
Poised some 300 miles off the coast of Oregon, one mile beneath the sea, yet rising 3,600 feet high, and spanning 1.2 miles ...
With eruptions in 1998, 2011, and 2015, the volcano serves as a perfect laboratory, and experts expect an eruption by the end ...
The good news is that because the top of the volcano is still 4,500 feet below the ocean’s surface, it poses no danger to people.
The Axial Seamount, an underwater volcano located about 300 miles off the coast of Oregon, is displaying behavior that ...
A seismic survey challenges the long-standing belief that only active volcanoes have large magma bodies sitting beneath them.
It appears that these magma bodies exist beneath volcanoes over their whole lifetime, not just during an active state.' ...
The Axial Seamount—a volcano located 300 miles off the coast of Oregon and a mile underwater—is slowly showing signs of an impending eruption. Although less well-known that other volcanic ...
An increase in seismic activity has prompted predictions that a mile-wide submarine volcano named the Axial Seamount will ...
New Cornell University led-research challenges the long-standing belief that active volcanoes have large magma bodies that ...
Earth bubbles and broils beneath an underwater peak called Axial Seamount, located 480 kilometers (300 miles) off Oregon's ...