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Video shared by the USGS on social media shows mud spraying up
and out from the pool just before 9:23 a.m. in Biscuit Basin
about midway between park favorites Old Faithful and Grand
Prismatic.
Other recent eruptions have mostly been audible and not visible,
because they happened either at night or when the camera was
obscured by ice.
The agency said the Black Diamond Pool was previously the site
of a hydrothermal explosion, in July 2024, that sent rocks and
mud flying hundreds of feet high and damaged a boardwalk. It
prompted the closure of the area to visitors due to the damage
and the potential for additional hazardous activity.
So-called dirty eruptions reaching up to 40 feet (about 12
meters) have occurred sporadically since then.
Researchers installed a new camera and a seismic and acoustic
monitoring station this summer, and they say the instruments,
along with temperature sensors maintained by the Yellowstone
National Park Geology Program, can better detect and
characterize the eruptions.
The Yellowstone Volcano Observatory webcam at Black Diamond Pool
didn't disappoint Saturday.
“We got a nice clear view of one of these dirty eruptions under
bright blue skies with the surroundings covered in snow (ah,
winter in Yellowstone!),” USGS Volcanoes said on social media,
noting that it was a great example of the kind of activity that
has been happening at the spot over the past 19 months.
Experts say there is no real pattern to the eruptions at the
pool and no precursors.
Park officials say Yellowstone preserves the most extraordinary
collection of hot springs, geysers, mud pots and fumaroles on
Earth. More than 10,000 hydrothermal features are found within
the park, over 500 of them geysers.
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