Enormous blobs deep beneath Earth's surface appear to drive giant volcanic eruptions

Pillars of hot rock appear to connect continental-size moving blobs at the bottom of Earth's mantle to giant volcanic eruptions at its surface.

a photo of steam coming from a geothermal vent
Yellowstone is a site where multiple giant eruptions have happened in the past.
(Image credit: Creative Travel Projects via Shutterstock)

Volcanic eruptions at Earth's surface have significant consequences. Smaller ones can scare tourists on Mount Etna or disrupt air traffic.

Giant, large-scale eruptions can have more serious impacts. One such event contributed to the demise of the dinosaurs 66 million years ago. Giant volcanoes also triggered events that led to the largest mass dying on Earth, the Permian—Triassic extinction 252 million years ago).

Nicolas Flament
Associate Professor and ARC Future Fellow, Environmental Futures, School of Science, University of Wollongong

Nicolas Flament is an Associate Professor at the University of Wollongong in Australia. He obtained his PhD from École Normale Supérieure de Lyon and the University of Sydney. He investigates the deformation of the solid Earth over tens of millions of years by merging geodynamic models with global geological and geophysical observations. He is a recipient of Australian Research Council DECRA (2016) and Future (2023) Fellowships, the 2017 EGU Geodynamics Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Award, the 2021 Anton Hales Medal (Australian Academy of Science), and the 2021 David Syme Research Prize (The University of Melbourne).

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