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Geyser

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Clepsydra Geyser in Yellowstone
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Clepsydra Geyser in Yellowstone

A geyser is a special type of hot spring that erupts periodically, ejecting a column of hot water and steam into the air. The name geyser comes from Geysir, the name of the best-known geyser in Iceland; that name, in turn, comes from the word gjósa, "to gush."

Geysers are quite rare, requiring a combination of geology and climate that exists in only a few places on Earth. There are only six large geyser areas in the world: Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming; Iceland; Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand; Kamchatka, Russia; El Tatio, Chile; and Umnak Island, Alaska. (There used to be two more in Nevada, called Beowawe and Steamboat Springs, but they were destroyed in the 1980s by the installation of nearby geothermal power plants, which reduced the available heat and lowered the local water table to the point that geyser activity could no longer be sustained.) There are more individual geysers around the world, in California, Peru, Bolivia, Mexico, Dominica, Azores, Kenya and Japan, but no other large clusters.

Yellowstone is by far the largest and most active geyser field, containing as many geysers in its nine geyser basins as the rest of the world combined (nearly 400 in all) including both the world's tallest geyser (Steamboat Geyser in Norris Geyser Basin) and the most famous (Old Faithful Geyser in Upper Geyser Basin).

Most of New Zealand’s major geyser fields have been destroyed by human or natural means since 1886. The main remaining field is Whakarewarewa at Rotorua. Two thirds of the geysers at Orakei Korako were flooded by the Ohakuri hydroelectric dam in 1961. The Wairakei field was lost to a geothermal power plant in 1958. The Taupo Spa field was lost when the Waikato River level was deliberately altered in the 1950s. The Rotomahana field was destroyed by the Mount Tarawera eruption in 1886. The Waimangu Geyser which existed from 1900 to 1904 was the largest geyser ever known. Small numbers of geysers still exist at other places within the Taupo Volcanic Zone including Ketetahi , Tokaanu and Waiotapu .

Contents

Description

There are two types of geyser: Fountain geysers erupt from pools of water, typically in a series of intense, even violent, bursts; cone geysers erupt from cones or mounds of siliceous sinter (also known as geyserite), usually in steady jets that last anywhere from a few seconds to several minutes. Old Faithful is a cone geyser.


Geyser activity, like all hot spring activity, is caused by surface water gradually seeping down through the ground until it meets rock heated by magma. The water then rises back toward the surface by convection through porous and fractured rock. Geysers differ from noneruptive hot springs in their subterranean structure: they generally consist of a small vent at the surface connected to one or more narrow tubes that lead to large underground reservoirs of water.

As the geyser fills, the water at the top of the column cools off, but because of the narrowness of the channel, convective cooling of the water in the reservoir is impossible. The cooler water above presses down on the hotter water beneath, not unlike the lid of a pressure cooker, allowing the water in the reservoir to become superheated, i.e. to remain liquid at temperatures well above the boiling point.

Ultimately, the temperatures near the bottom of the geyser rise to a point where boiling begins; steam bubbles rise to the top of the column. As they burst through the geyser's vent, some water overflows or splashes out, reducing the weight of the column and thus the pressure on the water underneath. With this release of pressure, the superheated water flashes into steam, boiling violently throughout the column. The resulting froth of expanding steam and hot water than sprays out of the geyser.

Eventually the water remaining in the geyser cools back to below the boiling point and the eruption ends; heated groundwater begins seeping back into the reservoir, and the whole cycle begins again.

Vixen Geyser in Yellowstone
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Vixen Geyser in Yellowstone

The intense transient forces inside erupting geysers are the main reason for their rarity. There are many volcanic areas in the world that have hot springs, mud pots and fumaroles, but very few with geysers. This is because in most places, even where other necessary conditions for geyser activity exist, the rock structure is loose, and eruptions will erode the channels and rapidly destroy any nascent geysers.

Most geysers form in places where there is volcanic rhyolite rock which dissolves in hot water and forms mineral deposits called siliceous sinter, or geyserite, along the inside of the plumbing systems. Over time these deposits cement the rock together tightly, strengthening the channel walls and enabling the geyser to persist.

Geysers are fragile phenomena and if conditions change, they can 'die'. Many geysers have been destroyed by people throwing litter into them, others by the installation of geothermal power plant s. The Great Geysir of Iceland had stopped erupting regularly by 2000. Eruptions could only be triggered by the addition of surfactants to the water. Following an earthquake in Iceland in 2000 the geyser began erupting regularly again. Initially the geyser erupted about eight times a day. As of July 2003, the geyser erupts around three times a day, but is steadily becoming less active again.

Despite the apparently harsh conditions, life is often found in geysers in the form of Thermophiles.

Misnamed geysers

In a number of places where there is geothermal activity wells have been drilled and fitted with impermeable casements that allow them to erupt like geysers. Though these so-called artificial geysers, technically known as erupting geothermal wells, are not true geysers, they can be quite spectacular. Old Faithful of California , in Calistoga, California, is an erupting geothermal well.

Sometimes drilled cold-water wells erupt in a geyserlike manner due to the build-up of pressure from dissolved carbon dioxide in the water. These are not true geysers either, but are often called cold-water geysers. The best known of these is probably Crystal Geyser , near Green River, Utah.

A perpetual spouter is a natural hot spring or geothermal well that spouts water constantly. Some of these are incorrectly called geysers, but because they are not periodic in nature they are not considered true geysers either.

Geysers on Triton

Plumes of liquid nitrogen have been observed on Neptune's moon Triton. It is not known what drives these geysers, but it is thought that solar heating plays a major role.

Geyser_exploding_1_large.jpg Geyser_exploding_2_large.jpg
1. Steam rises from heated water
2. Pulses of water swell upward
Geyser_exploding_3_large.jpg Geyser_exploding_4_large.jpg
3. Surface tension is broken
4. Ejected water spouts upward and falls back

Further reading

  • Bryan, T. Scott (1995). The geysers of Yellowstone. Niwot, Colorado: University Press of Colorado. ISBN 087081365X
  • Schreier, Carl (2003). Yellowstone's geysers, hot springs and fumaroles (Field guide) (2nd ed.). Homestead Pub. ISBN 0943972094

See Also


External links

  • Geysir gallery from islandsmyndir.is http://www.islandsmyndir.is/html_skjol/sudurland/geysir/forsida_geysir_1.htm
  • Geyser Observation and Study Association (GOSA) http://www.geyserstudy.org/
  • About Geysers http://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/~glennon/geysers/
  • Geysers and the Earth's Plumbing Systems http://www.umich.edu/~gs265/geysers.html
  • The UnMuseum - Geysers http://www.unmuseum.org/geysers.htm
  • Cold Water Geysers http://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/~glennon/crystalgeyser/
  • Geyser locations on New Zealand's North Island http://www.johnstonsarchive.net/geysers/northisld.html
  • California Geyser http://gocalifornia.about.com/cs/napasonoma/a/canapageyser.htm
  • Old Faithful of California http://www.wyojones.com/of_califonia.htm


Last updated: 03-18-2005 11:16:12