About: Yellowstone Eruption (Yellowstone: 1936)   Sponge Permalink

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The 1936 Yellowstone Eruption, also known as the Yellowstone Event or Eruption Day, was a supervolcanic eruption that occurred on the morning of July 18, 1936 at the site of the Yellowstone National Park. It has been considered the largest eruption in recorded history, and perhaps the largest volanic eruption in history. Tens of thousands died over the first number of days following the eruption, and the ash deposited in the atmosphere led to a worldwide volcanic winter lasting for twelve years (with cooling effects lasting well beyond then), as well as mass crop failure and famine, which furthered the death toll into the hundreds of millions; the most deadly natural disaster in human history.

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  • Yellowstone Eruption (Yellowstone: 1936)
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  • The 1936 Yellowstone Eruption, also known as the Yellowstone Event or Eruption Day, was a supervolcanic eruption that occurred on the morning of July 18, 1936 at the site of the Yellowstone National Park. It has been considered the largest eruption in recorded history, and perhaps the largest volanic eruption in history. Tens of thousands died over the first number of days following the eruption, and the ash deposited in the atmosphere led to a worldwide volcanic winter lasting for twelve years (with cooling effects lasting well beyond then), as well as mass crop failure and famine, which furthered the death toll into the hundreds of millions; the most deadly natural disaster in human history.
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  • The 1936 Yellowstone Eruption, also known as the Yellowstone Event or Eruption Day, was a supervolcanic eruption that occurred on the morning of July 18, 1936 at the site of the Yellowstone National Park. It has been considered the largest eruption in recorded history, and perhaps the largest volanic eruption in history. Tens of thousands died over the first number of days following the eruption, and the ash deposited in the atmosphere led to a worldwide volcanic winter lasting for twelve years (with cooling effects lasting well beyond then), as well as mass crop failure and famine, which furthered the death toll into the hundreds of millions; the most deadly natural disaster in human history. Since its eruption seventy-seven years ago, it has been a major watershed moment for the human species, with most governments worldwide still suffering the effects of the volcano (such as the failure of crop growth worldwide due to the cooling of Earth's temperature), and economic, technological and social growth being retarded due to the collapse of many governments in the subsequent years/decades following the eruption.
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