The island at the end of the world: Bouvetøya

Landsat image, May 2013

If you want to get away from it all, this is the place for you. If you prefer to experience your volcanoes in utter isolation, you could not do any better. If you have seen it all, come and see this. Find yourself a globe (for younger readers, this is a historical version of google earth without a zoom), and locate Bouvet Island. You will find it where the Atlantic Ocean and the Southern Ocean meet (a magnifying glass may be required). Draw a circle around it (permission from the owner of the globe should be sought). Within a radius of 1000 kilometer, you will not find not another speck of land. There isn’t even a shipping lane. The nearest significant land area is Antarctica, 1700 kilometer away. The closest human settlement is Trista da Cunha, which is over 2000 kilometer distant, and is itself not particularly well connected. Cape Town and South Georgia are both 2500 kilometer away. In comparison, the International Space Station seems suburban. Go to Bouvet Island, and you will be the loneliest person on Earth. Only the 24 astronauts who have gone to the moon will have been further away from the rest of the world than you.

Getting there might be a bit of a journey, and visits tend to be few and brief. It is not only isolated, the surrounding ocean is as inhospitable as it comes. Think roaring forties – but in the fifties, and much colder. The average temperature in summer (January) is +1C, and the dominant weather is cloudy to foggy with storm. Precipitation is about 1 meter per year, largely as snow.

Bouvet is difficult to land on even in good weather, on account of the strong surf, which can quickly swamp a boat. It can be even harder to get off the island! There may be 2 to 4 storms each week, with little calm weather in between, and from March to October the island may be entirely inaccessible due to the relentless weather.

Through an accident of history, related to whaling, Bouvet Island is now a Norwegian possession. You wouldn’t have guessed, although the climate does provide a hint. It is a UNESCO world heritage site, an honour it shares with Mount Etna, the Hawaiian and the Kamchatka’s volcanoes. But you will be hard-pressed to find the visitor centre. Norway likes to put its protected environments where no one will be inconvenienced. (15% of its national parks are on Svalbard!)

Bouvet Island (called Bouvetøya in norwegian) is 49 square kilometer in area. About a quarter of this is taken up by a caldera, called Wilhelmplataet. The highest point of the island is on the caldera rim, Olavtoppen, at 780 meter; it was climbed for the first time only in 2012. The ice-filled caldera itself is 250 meter below the rim.

Expedition to the summit

The ice cover of the island is impressive: the black volcanic rock peaks out only at the coast. The rocky beaches especially on the west side are ice-free, but in most places the glaciers get rather close to the edge of the island. In the east, the ice cliffs tower 50 meters above the beach. About a third of the coast line has glaciers flowing into the sea; elsewhere, the rock cliffs are too steep to support a glacier, and the glacier ends above the cliff. The glaciers appear to be quite thin. How deep the ice is inside the caldera is not known: the summit is in almost perpetual cloud and very few people have been on the caldera.

Nyrøysa. The research station visible in the photo was washed into the sea in 2006. The shelf formed from a landslide, probably coming from the top right. Photo: Dolph Kessler

A low-lying shelf exists on the west coast, called Nyrøysa, which appeared sometime between 1955 and 1958. It is 2 kilometer wide, 500 meter deep and up to 50 meters high. For a while it was thought it had formed from a volcanic eruption, but later it was shown it must have come from a land slide.  Elsewhere, much of the coast line is a steep cliff. The new shelf made landings much easier, and it was used to build shelters and automated weather stations. But they tended not to last, and often had disappeared by the time of the next landings. The cause is the catabatic winds coming down from the ice dome which can reach speeds up to 200 km/h.

There is one tiny satellite island to the southwest, Larsøya, which is ice-free.

If you like vegetation, there are some mosses and liverworts, and you can find a few lichens. Some of this has grown on the shelf, but most is on an ice-free region on the south coast, a few hundred meters up. Animal life is more abundant, in the form of seabirds, penguins, seals and elephant seals, principally on the western coastline. Many of the seals congregate on the Nyrøysa shelf on the west coast. There is also a large penguin colony there, of three different species, and one of the studies comments on the large loss of nests due to ‘interaction with seals’. I guess the egg shells have difficulty carrying the weight of several tons of elephant seal.

Astronaut Chuck Brady on Bouvet Island, with company

Bouvet Island has legendary status among ham radio enthusiasts. One of the ultimate achievements is to record worldwide contacts from this extreme location. The first to achieve this aim was Gus Browning in 1962, and the best-known ham operator here was Chuck Brady, who worked at a research station from December to early March in 2000/2001. Chuck (N4BQW) used a Mike Traffie HX-5B HEX-BEAM to make near 17,000 contacts. His team left the island only just in time: the recovery mission almost failed due to the autumn storms, and they left with only half an hour to spare. Chuck had previously flown as a NASA astronaut on the space shuttle. I wonder how the two experiences compared!

Volcanic activity

All deep-ocean islands are volcanic in nature. And because islands erode pretty fast, they tend to be younger volcanoes which are still active or slightly dormant. Bouvet is a shield volcano in the final stage of its life above water. The caldera shows that there have been significant eruptions in the past! Evidence that there is still life in the mountain comes from the presence of fumaroles, mainly on the north and west side, around the beaches. Reports suggest that they are short-lived. One fumarole was on a beach that eroded away, and has gone, and others show decline while new ones appear. It is possible that the fumaroles are activated by landslides: over decades the newly-exposed rock cools and the fumaroles disappear. In the Landsat image at the top of this post, there is a central peak in the caldera which shows there was an eruption after the caldera had formed. But it is not possible to see any details as it too is completely covered in snow.

The cliffs on the coast of Bouvet Island contain two main layers. The top layer contains a series of lava flows, with a few volcanoclastic deposits thrown in. The flows are largely basaltic, and have come from the caldera area. Only the youngest ones (Kapp Valdivia, Larsoya ) are rhyolitic and have formed domes on the flanks of the volcano. (A lava flow at Cape Meteor on the eastern flank has been argued to be 2000 or 4000 years old, but I have not found the source of this date.) The lower layer is made up from breccia and tuff, which formed in older, pyroclastic events. They may even have formed under water, as hyaloclastite.

The lower layer is quite soft and because it is at sea level, it makes the island rather susceptible to wave action. The wave erosion undercuts the cliffs; the result is landslides, which form beaches of debris. The beaches are quickly removed by the waves and the process begins again. In this way Larsoya became a separate island: erosion removed its link to the main island. The Nyrøysa shelf is eroding at a rate of between and 1 and 4 meters per year. How bad the erosion has become can be seen from the location of the caldera. It should be at the centre of the island, but instead it is on the western edge. The offset caldera makes the island look lopsided. It is caused by many centuries of wave erosion. The incessant westerlies have eaten away the exposed side of the island, and the erosion has now reached the caldera rim. That already tells you that Bouvet is in decline. The eruptions can’t keep up with the erosion and the island is getting smaller. Bouvet is past its prime and heading for retirement.

The landslides bring the basaltic rocks down to sea level, and the wave erosion turns it into a rough sand of basalt. In any other place, these blackest of black beaches would be famous. But here, in utter isolation, only the seals leave their impressions.

Changes at Larsoya between 1966 and 1979, caused by erosion. From https://brage.bibsys.no/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11250/173650/Skrifter175.pdf

Exploration

Jean-Baptiste Bouvet de Lozier, happy discoverer of the loneliest place on Earth

How did a Norwegian volcano (rare enough to begin with) end up with a French name? It came from Captain Jean-Baptiste Bouvet de Lozier, who discovered the speck in 1739. He saw it from a distance and did not sail around it: he reported it as the discovery of the southern continent. Due to its isolation and a map of rather questionable accuracy, it was not found again until 1808. James Lindsay re-discovered it, hundreds of kilometers from the position given by Bouvet, and named it Lindsay Island. One captain George Norris re-re-discovered it in 1825 and it acquired yet another name, Liverpool Island. He also reported a second island, 70 kilometer away, which he called Thompson island; it was never seen again and most likely never existed.

Because of this confusion, UK claims were deemed invalid, as it wasn’t clear which of these four islands they claimed, and the Norwegians ran away with the ownership.

Bouvet Island now has a registered internet domain, .bv. However, this domain has no known web sites.

Geology

The Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR), where the oceanic crust of the Atlantic Ocean is formed, runs from Iceland southward, ending at the Southern Ocean. Here it meets a complex fault which runs approximately east-west, connecting the southwestern part of the Indian Ocean Ridge to the South Sandwich Islands where a subduction zone is pulling in Patagonia. The end-point of the MAR is called the Bouvet Triple Junction – not entirely correct as Bouvet island is 250 kilometer away but there was nothing else here which could provide a name! The fault is called the Conrad Transform towards the west, and the Bouvet transform to the east, and separates the stable Antarctic plate, the African plate and the South American plate. Bouvet Island lies just south of the Bouvet Transform fault.

(Norway is in the curious position of owning both the southernmost (Bouvet) and northernmost (Jan Mayen) island of the MAR – and nothing else. And both are named after non-Norwegians.)

Between Bouvet Island and the MAR is the mysterious Spiess ridge. This is a massive volcanic feature, 80 kilometer long, with reaches to 320 meter below sea and has a large caldera. It seems young, perhaps 1 million year, although this is not well known.

Just looking at the sketch below shows how broken up the area is. Originally this was a more conventional-looking triple point, located some distance south of where the MAR ends now. The triple point moved up north, and every time it moved north the Conrad and Bouvet faults re-formed further north. The Spiess ridge appears to be one of the MAR sections that broke off, but another suggestion is that it was the formation of this ridge which caused the triple point to migrate northward.

‘Triple point’ is a funny expression, as in fact it is one point, not three. It is a place where three faults meet, so perhaps should be called ‘triple fault’, but as this would be confusing, sometimes it is called a ‘triple junction’. Each of the three faults can be of three varieties: a ridge (R), a trench (T), or a transform fault (F). A ridge forms if there is extension, i.e. seafloor spreading: you get a deep valley (a graben) and associated volcanism. A trench forms if there is subduction. A transform means that both sides slip past each other. Within a continental plate such a fault is called a strike-slip, but if it is between two different plates it is called a transform fault. Pure transform motion, sideways, is actually quite rare. An example of one is the South Iceland Seismic Zone. More commonly, a fault shows a bit of both extension and slip, as is the case on the Reykjanes Ridge. This case happens, for instance, where a strike-slip fault has a bend: you get areas of extension and areas of slip. This is called ‘transtensional’.

A triple junction is classified by which type of faults meet, for instance R-T-F if there is one spreading ridge, one subduction trench, and one transform fault (a somewhat unlikely configuration). An example of an R-R-R triple junction is at Afar, connecting the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden and the African Rift. The end of the San Andreas fault, the Mendocino Triple Junction, is F-F-T. An F-F-F junction is physically not possible.

The Bouvet triple junction started out as an R-F-F junction, 20 million years ago. Currently the Conrad and Bouvet transforms are at an angle with respect to each other, but that is because the South American plate has rotated since. Originally, the two faults were parallel and would just have been the extension of each other. Later, the triple junction started to move north, the Conrad/Bouvet fault broke into pieces, and became R-R-R as spreading ridges.

At Bouvet Island, the spreading rate is currently 1.5 cm/yr. A deep valley has formed, but the southern wall of this valley is a kilometer higher than is should be, for unclear reason. This is where Bouvet Island is found.

Why did the ridge here, and only here, become volcanic? Noone knows. There is speculation about a ‘Bouvet Island hot spot’ but there is not much evidence for it. A thermal anomaly has been proposed, but this is just another word for a hot spot (albeit without the connotation of a plume). The lack of land over such a large surrounding area already shows that the region is not particularly volcanic. There are no island chains or even submarine chains.

Age

When did Bouvet Island form? Based on the distance from the newly formed spreading ridge, and the known spreading rate, the crust is dated to 4.5-5 million years. The volcano cannot be any older than that! The bedrock of the volcano is dated to 1.4 million years, and well-dated rocks around the 1950’s landslide are around 0.5 million years, so by that time the volcano existed. All measured rocks have normal magnetic orientation, meaning that they are younger than 1 million years: before that time, the magnetic field was reversed for a long period, but this is not seen in the Bouvet rocks. They all formed after the last field reversal.

The rate on erosion can give a rough age of the island. The 1950’s landslide formed a shelf 2 kilometer wide, 500 meter deep and on average 10 meter tall. This gives a total volume of 0.01 km3. The west side of the island has been eroded back by perhaps 5 kilometer. Assuming an average height of 400 meter, and a width of 5 kilometer, the eroded volume is 10 km3. If we assume that such a collapse happens once a century, the erosion has taken 100,000 years. At this rate, the island would erode by 5 cm per year which seems a bit high so perhaps such large collapses are not quite as frequent. At 1 cm per year, the age becomes half a million years. This is probably within the right ballpark. This poor island has never seen warm weather: when it popped up from beneath the sea, the ice ages were already in progress.

In another half a million years, Bouvet Island will have gone. Enjoy it while you can.

Bouvet Island, southeast side, as seen at sunrise, eight miles distant, November 26, 1898. Water colour painting by F. Winter. P. 191. In: “Aus den Tiefen des Weltmeeres” by Carl Chun, 1903. Source: http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/htmls/ship3352.htm

The mystery of the deserted life boat

Bouvet Island is home to its very own Marie Celeste mystery. In 1964, a team helicoptered in from HMS Protector found an abandoned lifeboat, half submerged in a lagoon on the newly-formed shelf. The leader, Alan Crawford, wrote What drama, we wondered, was attached to this strange discovery. There were no markings to identify its origin or nationality. On the rocks a hundred yards away was a forty-four gallon drum and a pair of oars, with pieces of wood and a copper flotation or buoyancy tank opened out flat for some purpose. Thinking castaways might have landed, we made a brief search but found no human remains. Clearly people had come ashore with very limited supplies, but there was no indication from where they had come, why, and how (if?) they had left.

The boat must have arrived after 1955 as the shelf did not exist before that. It could not have made a sea journey of any length. Whoever used the boat to get to Bouvet Island, left no other trace, but did have enough man power to drag a heavy boat 30 meters over rough stones away from the sea. Did a ship flounder and the poor survivors ended up here? Where they eaten by the elephant seals? (Unlikely.) Rescued in secret?

Photo of the mystery boat by the helicopter pilot from HMS Protector. Source https://mikedashhistory.com/2011/02/13/an-abandoned-lifeboat-at-worlds-end/ See comment dated 26 FEBRUARY 2016 AT 11:21 PM, Mike Dash. Click on image for full resolution

The mystery was described brilliantly by Mike Dash in a blog article of 2011. He did a trail through all reported ship losses showed nothing. The answer was slowly pieced together by the various commenters on the blog, in a piece of exemplary citizen detective work, and the following is based on their work. There are two parts to the answer. The second part was by radio, and the first involved birds.

Let’s begin with the second part of the answer. In 1962, the ham enthusiast Gus Browning came to Bouvet Island to pioneer radio transmissions from there. A far-flung (expensive) ham radio trip is called a DXpedition. Browning (W4BPD) visited Bouvet on his second DXpedition, from 26 to 28 November 1962. According to his own description, he landed at Cape Circoncision, at a flat area about the size of two football pitches. This must have been Nyrøysa, the only flat bit in the area, and not badly placed for his purpose. Radio signals to Asia are blocked from there by the island, but America and Europe would have been reachable. Browning brought a large petrol drum – forty-four gallon is about the right size. The copper box, opened out and flattened, would have been very useful to ground his antenna, although it seems a bit strange to bring damaged ware with you on such an expedition. Browning had hitched a lift on an icebreaker, and was taken to the island by life boat. The boat returned three days later to pick him up. However, that boat certainly had not floundered there: he made it back safely and never mentioned such a disaster. So it certainly wasn’t his boat that was found.

The first part to the story, involving the boat, began in November 1958, when a Soviet vessel visited Bouvet Island on an ornithological expedition. A report was published in the Information Bulletin of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition, volume 13 (1959), pages 97-99, by Gennady Solyanik, with the exciting title “Some Bird Observations on Bouvet Island”. The vessel, the Slava-9, was part of the Soviet whaling fleet, but their scientific work was done in the context of the International Geophysical Year. Slava-9 would have had two rowing boats, each able to carry 24 men.

A party of 10 men, scientists and sailors, including Solyanik came ashore close to Cape Circoncision. Again, this almost certainly was on the newly formed Nyrøysa, which had just formed and was by far the best landing place. Shortly after their arrival a hurricane began making it impossible for them to return. The boat would not have been up to that weather. They stayed there for three days, time used for more bird observations than they had planned! When the storm finally subsided, the man were evacuated with the Mi-1MG helicopter carried on the Slava-9. The helicopter pilot was Averyan Rzhevskiy, who later wrote about this event. The boat was left behind and found its final resting place here. The lagoon may not have been there yet: the rock fall would have compacted over time, and storm filled in the depression -and the boat- with water.

Gus Browning must have come ashore at the same place as the Soviet researchers, and found the camp left by the previous expedition. After four years, the boat would already have been in poor condition. The copper box was used as a flotation device on the boat. Browning found it, and put it to good use, and added his own debris to the camp site. But he didn’t report any of this – to him only the radio counted. In this way he left a double mystery, and became a beachcomber, the scavenger of the Marie Celeste of Bouvet Island.

Aliens

In 2004, the movie Alien vs. Predator hit the cinemas. It is set on the not-so-mythical island of Bouvetøya. Wikipedia writes: This film follows a group of archaeologists assembled by billionaire Charles Bishop Weyland (Henriksen) for an expedition near the Antarctic to investigate a mysterious heat signal. Sadly, the budding volcanologists go for the wrong heat signal, instead of interesting eruptions they uncover a pyramid, and mayhem begins.

This film is well worth missing, and although set on Bouvet island, it wasn’t actually filmed there, so it is of no volcanological interest either.

The end of the world

Bouvet Island would be a good place to site the Restaurant at the End of the World. It meets all requirements, including a total lack of other customers. The main menu will be penguin omelet with an algae side dish, and the fumaroles provide just enough heat for the hot plate. Better stay indoors – because of the ice and the clouds, there is not much to see, making it ideal for people who have seen it all. And from experience I can confirm that a penguin colony smells atrocious.

But underneath the ice lies a hidden world of which we know little. The caldera and the pyroclastics provides evidence for a violent past, but we don’t know when. And how did this volcano form? If it is related to the migrating triple junction, why is it not at the triple junction? Why is there no other volcanic island within 1000 kilometer? And why is it dying? The abandoned boat may have been the easiest of Bouvet’s mysteries. There is more here than meets the eye. Aliens, anyone?

Albert – July 2017

Sources


Earth observatory
An abandoned lifeboat at world’s end
Travel log from Bouvet
Some bird observations on Bouvet Island
Chuck Brady on Bouvet Island
The expedition to the summit
The Norwegian Antaretie Research Expeditions 1976/77 and 1978/79

One of the inhabitants of Bouvet island is the Southern Rockhopper Penguin. Also known as the Trømp.

Riddles

Last week Ardnamurchan was finally solved. Also Basil Faulty’s Guinea Pig was found. This week there are five brand new Riddles to chomp down on.

This week also features an image riddle. Good hunting!

Name Last week’s points Total
Bjarki 1 3
Daisaster 0 3
Albert 1 2
Spike Page 2 2
Thomas A 0 2
Bobbi 1 1
Chris Cookie Cooke 1 1
KarenZ 0 1
  1. Collapsed fever of wild lava (iced near the singer and the ash in the area of Odadhahraun) – Kollotadyngja, answered by Irpsit (who also got a bonus point for listing every single volcanic feature in that region of Iceland)
  2. First woman of Stevenson and Gary Cooper – Upola, answered by Virtual
  3. Mined boring field of local spa (camel serai on the Ivory Road) – Tarso Voon, answered by Irpsit
  4. Saint Peter of the Grog – Pelée in Martinique, answered by Inannamoon.
  5. Harassing sane + (picture) – Harras of Dhamar, answered by zfid

221 thoughts on “The island at the end of the world: Bouvetøya

  1. Yay! Someone broached the triple junction topic!.

    As a fairly consistent rule, triple junctions are geologically noisy as they are,always adjusting to changing stress feilds of the adjoining plates. Only a few configurationsc are relatively stable, and the junction tends to wander down one of the plate boundaries until a stable configuration occurs. This happened as the Farallon plate went under and the two junctions migrated north and south, leaving the San Andreas in their wake. The Mendocino is the northern one and the Rivera is the southern junction. The transform/rifting down the gulf of California is a later feature.

  2. From IMO website : “Glacial outburst flood in Múlakvísl is ongoing. Electrical conductivity is now measured around 580 µS/cm and has increased rapidly the last hour. The outburst flood can be expected to reach its maximum within a few hours. People are advised to stay away from the river due to gas pollution, the river is showing a dark colour and smells of sulphur. The road administration is on site and they are prepared to close the main road if needed.
    Written by a specialist at 29 Jul 08:25 GMT”

    Measurements at Múlakvísl, source IMO.

  3. Thanks Albert, what a lovely read. Love a bit of triple junction volcanic mystery; Just needs a John Carpenter soundtrack to accompany it 😀

  4. Through mysterious shenanigan’s 5 new Evilitudes (Riddles) have mysteriously appeared at the bottom of Alberts fine article.

  5. #4 Lewisian Gneiss associated with Rum Island volcano in that it was pushed up to form a big dome

      • Darn thought the rock of rum had it bagged 😁 back to the drawing board … perhaps to more tropical surrounds?

  6. 4: Biu Plateau in Nigeria. The god Ogun was born in a volcano (Biu Plateau seems to be the closest in the area of his worship), Ogun is also usually shown debicted with rum as well as being given regular offerings of rum at ceremonies.

  7. Just in case, I will repeat my public service announcement from a year or two ago.

    If you’re looking at the Katla webcam and see something and wonder ‘is that an eruption’? it is NOT an eruption. If Katla goes into full eruption there will be absolutely no question about what you’re seeing on the webcam; you’ll KNOW it’s an eruption!

    • Ding! St Pierre was destroyed in the eruption, and Martinique has the most rumeries on the planet and is also home of the Grog. 🙂

      • Cool. Love the riddles, you learn the oddest things and always well suited for hangover days. Now I’m off to research magmatic cannibalism 😁

        • Ah, then I know which of the riddles you are putting in the fridge for a late snack 🙂

      • Many years ago (back in the 1980s), I was a member of the Association of Speakers Clubs (formerly Toastmasters International) and reached the semi-final of the National Speech Contest. The speech I delivered on that occasion was a graphic description of the eruption of Mount Pelée in 1902, specifically from the perspective of Louis-Auguste Cyparis (also known as Ludger Sylbaris), who was one of only two people known to survive the cataclysm that killed over 30,000 inhabitants of St Pierre.

  8. lovely read esp the resteraunt at the end of the world…. miss that man….. motsfo

  9. 3: Mined boring field of local spa

    Svartsengi geothermal field, the field has been both mined and bored into, and the local spa (the Blue Lagoon) is boring.

    • Very close, but very distant. You almost got a bonus point for that one. But, alas, there are two types of mines, and this was not it. 🙂

  10. Reykjanes has calmed down now. Katla had a flurry around midnight including a star, which perhaps was related to the start of the Jokulhaup? However, it was not quite at the surface.

  11. #5 San Juan Volcanic Field? There’s a cannibal plateau there named after a self confessed miner cannibal from back in the day. Me thinks there’s a matt stone and trey parker cannibal the musical song coming on

  12. Kayla is near an eruption now than in 2011. Strong harmonic tremor pulse detected and something new, GPS changes!

    http://brunnur.vedur.is/gps/katla.html

    But we still miss stronger swarms and deep quakes

    I still think an eruption will not happen this week but might be in a few months, similar to how it happened with Eyjafjallajokull ( GPS changes 2 months before the eruption)

      • I think that is totally possible. But whatever happened, it didn’t last long. That burst of tremor was big enough to give me a bad feeling. The lack of quakes seemed strange though.

        Held for approval by the filter. Future comments should appear without undue delay – admin

  13. The Mary Celeste story is most fascinating. Thanks for digging that up.

    And speaking of strange places, I had to put myself totally in Carl’s mind to come up with this answer to riddle #2.

    Yellowstone!
    Gary Cooper and an actor called Charles Stevenson both were in a movie in which Cooper’s character fell in love with the daughter of Steveson’s character. The leading lady, Florence Vidor, played a character called Mary Viner.

    Of all the names mentioned above, only Mary yielded any results in the search on GVP..and it yielded six…but being that the name of the film was Doomsday, Mary Bay of the Yellowstone caldera is the most logical answer.

    Also, I am impressed if I am correct. I never knew Carl was a silent movies fan.

    • Actually I am a silent movie fan. But, alas, this was not the answer. It was not the right woman, nor was it the right volcano 😉

  14. nr 2 Dr Anja Schmidt?

    Gary Cooper and Charles A Stevenson both acted in a movie called Doomsday.
    National Geographic has an episode of Nova called Doomsday Volcanoes and there is only one woman in there who also happens to be a volcanologist.

  15. A. Thank you to Albert for the interesting article!

    B. Main news this past week: Scotland’s hamlet of Dull has for some time been twinned with Oregon’s Boring and now Austrailia enters the party with a town called Bland. Marketing connoisseurs should be watching for the tourism multi-destination of Dull, Bland & Boring.

    As said above Boring has its lava field. Dull is on the southern flanks of the Caledonian orogeny (Grampian mountains). We await like news of Bland.

    The filter decided this needed approval. Filter has been warned. – admin

  16. Another try at riddle 2: Upolo in Samoa

    The movie Return to Paradise with Gary Cooper in it was filmed there.
    The writer Robert Louis Stevenson lived and died there.
    And finally,from Wiki, : In the Samoan branch of Polynesian mythology, Upolu was the first woman on the island of the same name

    Regardless the result, the chase of the riddles is the most fun part leading to interesting places

  17. How about puritama hot springs up in the atacama for #3 or the el tatio geysir field. There’s landmines in the area and I’m sure a borehole or 2

  18. It’s unlikely, but

    3. Baekdu? The country is famous for its land mines, of course, and there’s a spa and a ginseng field. But I don’t see how “boring” relates…

  19. 3. Bora Bora – part of French Polynesia including the islands of Bora Bora and Tahiti known for tourist spas. The island of Makatea was mined for phosphate during the first half of the 20th century. An Australian company has filed for a permit to start mining there again.

  20. 1 – Kilauea

    It has suffered bench collapse and the runny lava is pretty wild (ask Jesper). There has also been an outbreak of dengue fever on the island.

    • No, since it is not a volcano it would be cheating. But, you gave me an idea for the fall campaign of evilitudes. We should expand it a bit into terminology. Previously I also had volcanologists in it. But, when I did that I pointed out that one of the riddles was about a volcanologist. So, if and when I expand I will say so 🙂

  21. #1 – Ollague…an ague is a fever, and Ollague had a large debris avalanche in the Pleistocene….and..um….err…I’m wild about basaltic andesite? 🙂

  22. Quick question in regards to the potential minor eruption in Katla the other day, and back in 2011.
    The shallow quakes that we are seeing are by most accounts turning the ground to mush and loose debris, more or less, thus making an eruption easier to push through. However when these small eruptions do happen we have to assume that the lava which comes into contact with icecold meltwater hardens.

    This hardened lava, will it make the ground extra hard, and in need of new breaking down? or is it still loose’ish rubble? or something else. And obviously the glacier will erode the uppermost parts.

    Am I making sense with this question?

    • When you add water to Lava it equals to a steam explosion. Which makes it even easier for new lava to break through. If an eruption did happen. It would have been of this nature.

      Offcource if there is a lot of ice. It could contain the eruption. And its sheer pressure on the surrounding rock could close the vent again once pressure drops enough. But I would not count on the new lava layer to block any future eruptions. It would be too thin and indeed too loose to be a meaningfull barier against a force that just crashed itself though kilometers of dense rock.

      • In a text I read on caldera collapse, it stated that as soon as the chamber/dike pressure drops below the confining pressure, the dike slams shut. In this case, you have lithostatic stress (mass of the overburden) along with the hoop strength of the originating chamber. (a combination of tensile fracture strength of the rock coupled with lithostatic stress) Both have to be overcome in order for a finger of magma to start making an intrusion. Once the pressure pushing the magma is below that threshold, the show is over and you get a failed eruption if it hasn’t breached the surface. Oh, and the heat doesn’t dissipate as fast as one would think. Rock is a great insulator.

        • that last line rock is a great insulator -also means that even (despite the phreatic ice water lava interaction) if you could ‘freeze’ the tip of the dyke then it would only need to be a very thin layer of rock between the ice and the still moltenrock – and thus negligible barrier to later intrusions

    • It was certainly interesting, especially seeing the extremely steep scarp of Mt Rinjani, the sheer scale of the deposits on Lombok and how the sulphur spike of the eruption was twice that of Tambora and Laki. I still find it incredible that the two most recent VEI-7 eruptions occurred on neighbouring islands!

    • Thanks! I’ve been watching and studying Stromboli the last few weeks, and your article spot is a nice bonus.

  23. Clues have now been appended!
    Good luck hunting after ashy serajs and stuff 🙂

  24. Fagradalsfjall: new swarm, same depth as before but nothing as strong. let’s call it an afterswarm.

    • I think it has gone the way of the Upptyppingar swarm. It will slowly migrate upwards, or to another place like the Upptyppingar swarm that ended up under Herdubreid.
      I think this place will be going on and off for years.

  25. number 3: El Teide. Local spa means Spain, lots of bore holes near the summit of El Teide, a nearby pumice field is mined (Minas de San Jose). Seraj is a speed boat (or a restaurant in Halifax – I discounted that one) and El Teide is on an island.

    • I learned quite a few things, I had no clue that Local Spa meant Spain.
      And the mines was of the other type.
      What really surprised me was that serai could mean speed boat. If you had mined it correctly I would have given out a bonus-pint.

      • Retry (previous comment evaporated on submission)

        ‘local’= ‘in’ so ‘spa’+’local’=spain !

        Any volcano can be viewed as a landmine. It is an underground intrusion and blows up.

        • Well, there is Los Frailes, it’s been in the news lately as well.

          Controversial Spanish mine to reopen

          From what I remember in past scribblings is that this is an area where three large caldera systems reside. The big question was why some are mineralized and other aren’t. (mineralized=minerals concentrated to the point of being economically viable to extract/mine)

          The bit that catches my attention is that mineralization that develops gold and other deposits involve hydrothermal fluids containing arsenic. It seems that arsenic laden water can carry a higher concentration of disolved gold and when the temperature or pressure drop below a critical threshold, the gold comes out of solution and builds up into deposits. (the same process also deposits quartz).

          Cabo de Gata.

          Edit: Corrected the gender of the cat.

        • I am a bit stunned that the serai has turned from the classic meaning into an Iranian patrol vessel. Let me assure everyone that the Iranian Connection might be a fine movie title, but it will not lead you towards the correct volcano. 🙂

  26. I tried icelandic spar (rather than spa) as serai apparently means illuminate and I thought of the viking sunstone – but I’m getting nowhere with landmines unless you’re going with Cordierite and cordite somehow

    • I am amazed at how many ways people can bend things away from the target 🙂
      Nope!

  27. Time to join the discussion here, too. Normally I’m more active on Facebook. 😉

    You’re welcome! The first comment normally requires approval. Future comments should appear instantly – admin

  28. #1 Lassen? It’s such a stretch I’m too embarrassed to say why

    • Named for mosquitoes so bound need plenty of gin to go help the fever, or rather quinine. Also on the caravan route and the areas a bit dicey.

    • Lol, scratch that. I’m merging riddles 1 & 3 together to create a brand new one with it’s own answer. Clearly an early night is called for 🙂

    • Waw an Namus is close…
      It has the serai part to a T, now if people just imagined that they are a camel and moved further. 🙂

  29. 3 Mined boring field of local spa (serai)

    I feel somewhat confident that we are in Cappadocia, Turkey, as several caravanserais there have been built using volcanic rock, and some get heated by hot springs. There have been conflict in the area way back, in which there was undermining activities from several sides. So, for a guess, Mount Hasan?

    Or I’m way off again.

  30. Could #1 perhaps be Montagu Island? It’s near Ashen Hills. Not sure the singer connection (I don’t follow pops much)

    • Edit – sorry, Master Thesis: ‘Global geochemical variation of Mid-Ocean Ridge Basalts’
      Hermann Martin Friedemann Drescher: 2014

  31. After what seems like months, Klyuchevskoy is finally out of the clouds and still puffing away. This volcano amazes me.

  32. #3 When I look out my window I see the Mayacama Mountains that separate Sonoma and Napa Valley. Lots of local spas. Aqua Caliente, Calastoga, At least local to me. There are also the Silverado mines (one of the few places mercury is found in easy to extractable form.) To the north of what I look are the White Sulfur springs hills.
    Further to the north, but out of view is Gyeserville and the Clear lake Caldera.
    Yet I doubt any of this is valid. Still the game is fun to play, the wrong answers sometimes more interesting than the right ones.

    Robert Lewis Stevenson, modeled Treasure island after this ridge. It was strange reading that book one time in the living room and looking out the window at what he was describing.

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