Deep below Death Valley"s charred surface, blazing hot magma once gushed up through a geologic fault until it hit groundwater. The magma quickly turned the water to steam, and like a defective subterranean pressure cooker, the Earth"s crust blew its top in a ferocious explosion. The hydrovolcanic eruption sent up a mushroom cloud of steam and spewed burnt volcanic cinders for miles. It also left the giant crater seen in this photo and 12 smaller ones spread across the surface.
When Death Valley blew its top
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
International Tea Day
-
Pearl Harbor Day
-
Happy Mother s Day!
-
It’s NASA’s 60th birthday
-
Atolls in the Maldives
-
Old Fortress, Corfu, Greece
-
Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul, Minnesota
-
Take me to the river
-
Across the great plains of Africa
-
The Nutcracker performed by the Turkish State Opera and Ballet in Türkiye
-
World Olive Tree Day
-
National Public Lands Day
-
Florentine garden brings generations together
-
Seitan Limania Beach, Crete
-
Mesmerizing murmuration
-
Village of Santa Maddalena, Dolomites, Italy
-
Maritime forest on Cumberland Island, Georgia
-
Lizard of mystery
-
Canadian Thanksgiving
-
Saint Dwynwen s Day
-
The Door County Coastal Byway in Wisconsin
-
Mack Arch Rock
-
Marshland, Gloucester, MA
-
Autumn in the Prosecco Hills
-
Happy Halloween!
-
Reflections of the night sky
-
Andean cocks-of-the-rock, Ecuador
-
Skaftafell, Vatnajökull National Park, Iceland
-
Happy birthday, Saguaro National Park
-
A perfect day to fly your flag
Bing Wallpaper Gallery


