Sunday, April 29, 2018

Melchizedek Predictions - Yellowstone update - Steamboat Geyser comes to life three times after 8 year rest - Is Yellowstone awakening?


So maybe another geyser erupting at Yellowstone is no big deal.  However, coming on top of a massive increase in Earthquake activity, heating up of surface rivers and lakes, and new ways of measuring the monstrous lava pool sitting just below the surface like a giant time bomb ready to erupt, it is getting attention.

People are on edge, while conspiracy dwellers are ready to burst in anxiety, as the dreaded Yellowstone super-volcano shakes, rattles, and rolls.  If the supervolcano should erupt, and the last time was 640,000 years ago, it would cause worldwide damage.

However, Melchizedek said there would be a substantial increase in seismic activity including geyser eruptions, earthquakes, and even superheated rivers and lakes.  While this significant change in behavior in one of the world's most dangerous natural parks will strike fear in the hearts of doomsday advocates, this will not trigger the supervolcano eruption.

We should consider it a wakeup call to remind us to stop damaging Mother Earth, one of God's precious creations, and find harmony and a state of grace with the Earth.  All of God's creations are special to him and should be to us. 

Here is what the news media had to say about the latest Yellowstone activity.




 Unusual eruptions at world's largest active geyser in Yellowstone
 By Jon Herskovitz,Reuters 8 hours ago 


(Reuters) - The world's largest active geyser has erupted three times in the past six weeks at Yellowstone National Park, including once this week, in a pattern that is unusual but not at all indicative of a more destructive volcanic eruption brewing beneath Wyoming, geologists said on Saturday.
Steamboat Geyser, which can shoot water as high as 300 feet (91 meters) into the air, erupted on March 15, April 19 and on Friday. The last time it erupted three times in a year was in 2003, the U.S. Geological Survey's Yellowstone Volcano Observatory said.
The last time it erupted prior to March was more than three years ago in September 2014.
"There is nothing to indicate that any sort of volcanic eruption is imminent," Michael Poland, the scientist in charge for the observatory, said in an email.
This year's eruptions have been smaller than a usual Steamboat eruption, but the two in April were about 10 times larger than an eruption at the park's famed Old Faithful Geyser in terms on the amount of water discharged, he said.
Geologists have not pinpointed a reason for the latest series of eruptions, but say they could indicate a thermal disturbance in the geyser basin, or that Steamboat may be having smaller eruptions instead of one large.
Since most geysers do not erupt on a regular schedule, "it might just reflect the randomness of geysers," Poland said.
Only Waimangu Geyser in New Zealand has rocketed to greater heights than Steamboat, but not for more than 100 years, the U.S. National Park Service said.
Yellowstone sits atop a volcano that created a vast crater. Its plateau hosts the world's most diverse and expansive continental hydrothermal systems, including the multicolored springs, mudpots and geysers for which the park is known.
While the Steamboat eruptions are unusual, what would be far more worrying would be the water in the hydrothermal systems drying up, which could indicate that the super hot magma deep below was making its way to the surface.
"Yellowstone hasn't had a volcanic eruption for 70,000 years! Geysers erupt all the time," said Jake Lowenstern, a USGS research geologist who specializes in volcanoes.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Daniel Wallis and XX)








Yellowstone geyser erupts for 3rd time in 6 weeks
  • By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. — Apr 27, 2018, 6:50 PM ET


Yellowstone National Park geologists have reported the third eruption from the world's largest active geyser in the past six weeks.

The National Park Service says a park visitor reported seeing a rare eruption of Steamboat Geyser on Friday.


Park geologists compared the report with seismic activity and the discharge of water and concluded the eruption probably started at 6:30 a.m.

The geyser also erupted on March 15 and April 19.
All three eruptions were smaller than the last major eruption that occurred on Sept. 3, 2014.

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