快猫短视频

Why are there so many devastating volcanic eruptions right now?

High-profile volcanic eruptions in Hawaii and Guatemala are grabbing the headlines, but geophysics isn't responsible for connecting the two disasters
Hawaii's Kilauea volcano is causing major damage
Hawaii鈥檚 Kilauea volcano is causing major damage
Mario Tama/Getty Images

First Hawaii, where the Kilauea volcano has been spewing lava and ash for more than a month. Then Guatemala, where the Volcan del Fuego volcano erupted with huge and lethal force on Sunday. But did one cause the other?

At least聽75 deaths have been confirmed in Guatemala and 200 remain missing, while at least 80 houses have been destroyed in Hawaii. Given the scenes of devastation, people could be forgiven for thinking that a chain reaction of catastrophic volcanic activity is upon us.

But volcanologists say that the truth is more prosaic. Volcanoes happen all the time in unpopulated areas without us noticing, but when two highly devastating eruptions happen at once, we automatically clutch for a common cause.

Learn more at 快猫短视频 Live:

鈥淔or instance, who noticed there was one in Vanautu in April?鈥 says Jess Johnson, a volcanologist at the University of East Anglia who recently spent two years studying Kilauea in Hawaii. 鈥淭here are so many volcanoes in the world, and there鈥檚 always something happening.鈥

Eruptions everywhere

Historic data on volcanic eruptions catalogued by the US Smithsonian Institution鈥檚 show that the numbers of eruptions , hovering between around 65 and 80 per year.

There are also solid geological reasons why eruptions tend to be isolated events. 鈥淭hey are fairly local phenomena,鈥 says Johnson. Eruptions happen when rock beneath a volcanic summit melts to form magma, but the聽cause of this melting is usually local in nature, within just tens of kilometres.

In Guatemala, one tectonic plate sliding over another is to blame. In Hawaii, Kilauea erupted after the floor of a lava lake at the summit collapsed, draining the material into the plumbing beneath. Different places, different geology, different causes. 鈥淚f erupting volcanoes are more than 100 kilometres apart, there鈥檚 no connection,鈥 says Johnson.

It may simply be that one large eruption heightens interest and alarm if there鈥檚 another soon after. 鈥淚鈥檓 not sure Guatemala would have got as much press if Hawaii hadn鈥檛 happened,鈥 says Johnson. 鈥淧eople want to make these links, and maybe social media has a lot to do with it.鈥

Topics: Volcano