Wednesday, 12 October 2022

Fact of the Day: Which state capital is atop a volcano?

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Original photo by Sean Pavone/ iStock
Jackson, Mississippi, lies atop a dormant volcano.
At first glance, Jackson, Mississippi, is like any other state capital, with its domed capitol building standing squarely in the heart of the city. However, 2,900 feet below the surface lies a surprising secret — an ancient volcano. Although the West Coast and Hawaii are the U.S.'s biggest volcanic hot spots, millions of years ago active volcanoes also dotted the northern Gulf of Mexico region. One of these volcanoes was the Jackson Volcano, and the city's Mississippi Coliseum now sits above its ancient crater. Thankfully for the city's residents, the volcano is extinct and hasn't erupted since around the age of the dinosaurs.

The Jackson Dome formed in what's known as the Mississippi Embayment, a sedimentary basin that was an extension of the Gulf of Mexico coastal plain, around 70 million years ago. Despite being buried by layers of rock due to various geographic transformations over millions of years, the volcano's presence is still felt in surprising ways. Because of the dense igneous rock of the volcano, gravity is slightly stronger in the area, making Jacksonians heavier than their fellow Mississippians. And while Jackson is the only capital city set atop a volcano, volcanic formations can also be seen within the limits of other U.S. cities, including Portland, Oregon, and Honolulu, Hawaii.
 
Over the past 12,000 years, the U.S. has had the most active volcanoes of any country.
Reveal Answer Reveal Answer
Numbers Don't Lie
Percent of the Earth's surface that is volcanic in origin
80
Year geologist E.W. Hilgard discovered the extinct volcano beneath Jackson
1860
Registered members of the Choctaw Nation (Indigenous to the Jackson area)
223,279
Years the volcanoes of the Northern Gulf, including Jackson's, have been silent
65 million
Did You Know? Volcanoes caused the most severe extinction event in Earth's history.
Some 252 million years ago, an event known as the End-Permian Extinction, or "the Great Dying," killed 9 out of every 10 living species on Earth. The change to the planet was profound: The event spelled the end of the 47 million-year-long Permian geologic period, cleaned the terrestrial slate, and allowed reptiles to evolutionarily outpace protomammals to become the new dominant lifeform on Earth — dinosaurs. Although a variety of things likely coalesced to kickstart the Great Dying, one key culprit took place in an area known today as the Siberian Traps, a hilly region in northern Russia. Beginning around 252 million years ago, this region erupted continuously for 2 million years and covered 2.7 million square miles in lava. The volcanoes also pumped a massive amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, causing a runaway greenhouse effect that led to hotter temperatures and increased ocean acidification. Scientists estimated that at one point during this extinction event, ocean water near the equator reached hot-tub-level temperatures of about 104 degrees Fahrenheit. Today, the dramatic activity that took place in the Siberian Traps is the largest known volcanic event of the past 500 million years.
 
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