Mud Volcanoes, Geysers, and Hot Springs.
Our usual impression of a volcano
is indicated in the title of “burning mountain,”
so often employed, a great fire-spouting cone of volcanic
debris, from which steam, lava, rock-masses, cinder-like
fragments, and dust, often of extreme fineness, are
flung high into the air or flow in river-like torrents
of molten rock. This, no doubt, applies in the
majority of cases, but the volcanic forces do not confine
themselves to these magnificent displays of energy,
nor are their products limited to those above specified.
We have seen that mud is a not uncommon product, due
to the mingling of water with volcanic dust, while
water alone is occasionally emitted, of which we have
a marked instance in the Volcan de Agua,
of Guatemala, already mentioned. As regards mud
flows, we may specially instance the first outflow
from Mont Pelee, that by which the Guerin sugar works
were overwhelmed.
The imprisoned forces of the earth
have still other modes of manifestation. A very
frequent one of these, and the most destructive to
human life of them all, is the earthquake.
Minor manifestations of volcanic action
may be seen in the geyser and the hot spring, the
latter the most widely disseminated of all the resultant
effects of the heated condition of the earth’s
interior. It is these displays of subterranean
energy, differing from those usually termed volcanic,
yet due to the same general causes, that we have next
to consider. And it may be premised that their
manifestations, while, except in the case of the earthquake,
less violent, are no less interesting, especially
as the minor displays are free from that peril to
human life which renders the major ones so terrible.
While the largest volcanoes at times
pour out rivers of liquid mud, there are volcanoes
from which nothing is ever ejected but mud and water,
the latter being generally salt. From this circumstance
they are sometimes called salses, but they are
more generally termed mud-volcanoes. Some varieties
of them throw out little else than gases of different
sorts, and these are called air-volcanoes.
THE GREAT MUD VOLCANO OF SICILY
One of the best known mud-volcanoes
is at Macaluba, near Girgenti, in Sicily. It
consists of several conical mounds, varying from time
to time in their form and height, which ranges from
eight to thirty feet. From orifices on the tops
of these mounds there are thrown out sometimes jets
of warmish water and mud mixed with bitumen, sometimes
bubbles of gas, chiefly carbonic acid and carburetted
hydrogen, occasionally pure nitrogen. The mud
ejected has often a strong sulphurous smell. The
jets in general ascend only to a moderate height;
but occasionally they are thrown up with great violence,
attaining a height of about 200 feet. In 1777
there was ejected an immense column, consisting of
mud strongly impregnated with sulphur and mixed with
naphtha and stones, accompanied also by quantities
of sulphurous vapors. This mud-volcano is known
to have been in action for fifteen centuries.
Very recently a small mud-volcano
has been formed on the flanks of Mount Etna.
It began with the throwing up of jets of boiling water,
mixed with petroleum and mud, great quantities of
gas bubbling up at the same time. In several
of the valleys of Iceland there are similar phenomena,
the boiling water and mud being thrown up in jets
to the height of fifteen feet and upwards, the mud
accumulating around the orifices whence the jets arise.
A mud-volcano named Korabetoff, in
the Crimea, presents phenomena more akin to those
of the igneous volcanoes of South America. There
was an eruption from this mountain on the 6th of August,
1853. It began by throwing up from the summit
a column of fire and smoke, which ascended to a great
height. This continued for five or six minutes,
and was followed at short intervals by two similar
eruptions. There was then ejected with a hissing
noise a quantity of black fetid mud, which was so
hot as to scorch the grass on the edges of the stream.
The mud continued to pour out for three hours, covering
a wide space at the mountain’s base. The
mud-volcanoes on the coast of Beloochistan are very
numerous, and extend over an area of nearly a thousand
square miles. Their action resembles that at
Macaluba.
THE MUD VOLCANO OF JAVA
There is a mud volcano in Java which
is of interest as somewhat resembling the geyser in
its mode of operation and apparently due to similar
agencies. It is thus described by Dr. Horsfield:
“On approaching it from a distance,
it is first discovered by a large volume of smoke,
rising and disappearing at intervals of a few seconds,
resembling the vapors rising from a violent surf.
A loud noise is heard, like that of distant thunder.
Having advanced so near that the vision was no longer
impeded by the smoke, a large hemispherical mass was
observed, consisting of black earth mixed with water,
about sixteen feet in diameter, rising to the height
of twenty or thirty feet in a perfectly regular manner,
and as if it were pushed up by a force beneath, which
suddenly exploded with a loud noise, and scattered
about a volume of black mud in every direction.
After an interval of two or three, or sometimes four
or five seconds, the hemispherical body of mud rose
and exploded again. In the manner stated this
volcanic ebullition goes on without interruption,
throwing up a globular body of mud, and dispersing
it with violence through the neighboring plain.
The spot where the ebullition occurs is nearly circular,
and perfectly level. It is covered only with
the earthy particles, impregnated with salt water,
which are thrown up from below. The circumference
may be estimated at about half an English mile.
In order to conduct the salt water to the circumference,
small passages or gutters are made in the loose muddy
earth, which lead to the borders, where it is collected
in holes dug in the ground for the purpose of evaporation.”
The mud has a strong, pungent, sulphurous
smell, resembling that of mineral oil, and is hotter
than the surrounding atmosphere. During the rainy
season the explosions increase in violence.
There are submarine mud volcanoes
as well as those of igneous kind. In 1814 one
of this character broke out in the Sea of Azof, beginning
with flame and black smoke, accompanied by earth and
stones, which were flung to a great height. Ten
of these explosions occurred, and, after a period
of rest, others were heard during the night. The
next morning there was visible above the water an
island of mud some ten feet high. A very similar
occurrence took place in 1827, near Baku, in the Caspian
sea. This began with a flaming display and the
ejection of great fragments of rock. An eruption
of mud succeeded. A set of small volcanoes discovered
by Humboldt in Turbaco, in South America, confined
their emissions almost wholly to gases, chiefly nitrogen.
There is a close connection in character
between mud volcanoes and those intermittent boiling
springs named geysers. A good many of the mud
volcanoes throw out jets of boiling water along with
the mud; but in the case of the geysers, the boiling
water is ejected alone, without any visible impregnation,
though some mineral in solution, as silica, carbonate
of lime, or sulphur, is usually present.
THE GEYSER IS A WATER VOLCANO
The phenomenon of the geyser serves
in a measure to support the theory that steam is an
important agent in volcanic action. A geyser,
in fact, may be designated as a water volcano, since
it throws up water only. It comprises a cone
or mound, usually only a few feet high. In the
middle of this is a crater-like opening with a passage
leading down into the earth. As in the case of
the volcano, the geyser cone is built up by its own
action. In the boiling water which is ejected
there is dissolved a certain amount of silica.
As the water falls and cools this mineral is deposited,
gradually building up a cup-like elevation. The
basin of the geyser is generally full of clear water,
with a little steam rising from its surface; but at
intervals an eruption takes place, sometimes at regular
periods, but more often at irregular intervals.
Among the largest and best known geysers
in the world are those of Iceland, chief among them
being the Great Geyser. Silica is the mineral
with which the waters of this fountain are impregnated,
and the substance which they deposit, as they slowly
evaporate, is named siliceous sinter. Of this
material is composed the mound, six or seven feet
high, on which the spring is situated. On the
top of the mound is a large oval basin, about three
feet in depth, measuring in its larger diameter about
fifty-six, and in its shorter about forty-six feet.
The centre of this basin is occupied by a circular
well about ten feet in diameter, and between seventy
and eighty feet deep.
Out of the central well springs a
jet of boiling water, at intervals of six or seven
hours. When the fountain is at rest, both the
basin and the well appear quite empty, and no steam
is seen. But on the approach of the moment for
action, the water rises in the well, till it flows
over into the basin. Then loud subterranean explosions
are heard, and the ground all round is violently shaken.
Instantly, and with immense force,
a steaming jet of boiling water, of the full width
of the well, springs up and ascends to a great height
in the air. The top of this large column of water
is enveloped in vast clouds of steam, which diffuse
themselves through the air, rendering it misty.
These jets succeed each other with great rapidity to
the number of sixteen or eighteen, the period of action
of the fountain being about five minutes. The
last of the jets generally ascends to the greatest
height, usually to about 100, but sometimes to 150
feet; on one occasion it rose to the great height
of 212 feet. Having ejected this great column
of water, the action ceases, and the water that had
filled the basin sinks down into the well. There
it remains till the time for the next eruption, when
the same phenomena are repeated. It has been found
that, by throwing large stones into the well, the period
of the eruption may be hastened, while the loudness
of the explosions and the violence of the fountain
effect are increased, the stones being at the same
time ejected with great force.
ERUPTION CAN BE INDUCED BY ARTIFICIAL MEANS
Geysers are found all over the island,
presenting various peculiarities. In the case
of one of the smaller ones, which is called Strokr,
or the Churn, an eruption can be induced by artificial
means. A barrow-load of sods is thrown into the
crater of the geyser, with the effect of causing an
eruption. The sensitiveness of Strokr is due to
its peculiar form. An observer states that, “The
bore is eight feet in diameter at the top, and forty-four
feet deep. Below twenty-seven feet it contracts
to nineteen inches, so that the turf thrown in completely
chokes it. Steam collects below; a foaming scum
covers the surface of the water, and in a quarter
of an hour it surges up the pipe. The fountain
then begins playing, sending its bundles of jets rather
higher than those of the Great Geyser, flinging up
the clods of turf which have been its obstruction
like a number of rockets. This magnificent display
continues for a quarter of an hour or twenty minutes.
The erupted water flows back into the pipe from the
curved sides of the bowl. This occasions a succession
of bursts, the last expiring effort, very generally,
being the most magnificent. Strokr gives no warning
thumps, like the Great Geyser, and there is not the
same roaring of steam accompanying the outbreak of
the water.”
The same author thus describes an
eruption of the Great Geyser, which occurred about
two o’clock in the morning: “A violent
concussion of the ground brought me and my companions
to our feet. We rushed out of the tent in every
condition of dishabille and were in time to see Geyser
put forth his full strength. Five strokes underground
were the signal, then an overflow, wetting every side
of the mound. Presently a dome of water rose
in the centre of the basin and fell again, immediately
to be followed by a fresh bell, which sprang into
the air fully forty feet high, accompanied by a roaring
burst of steam. Instantly the fountain began
to play with the utmost violence, a column rushing
up to the height of ninety or one hundred feet against
the gray night sky, with mighty volumes of white steam
cloud rolling after it and swept off by the breeze
to fall in torrents of hot rain. Jets and lines
of water tore their way through the clouds, or leaped
high above its domed mass. The earth trembled
and throbbed during the explosion, then the column
sank, started up again, dropped once more, and seemed
to be sucked back into the earth. We ran to the
basin, which was left dry, and looked down the bore
at the water, which was bubbling at the depth of six
feet.”
In the case of Strokr, the cause of
this eruption is not difficult to understand.
The narrow part of the channel is choked up by the
turf and the steam, and prevented from escaping.
Finally it gains such force as to drive out the obstacle
with a violent explosion, just as a bottle of fermenting
liquor may blow out the cork and discharge some of
its contents.
Geysers are somewhat abundant phenomena,
existing in many parts of the earth, while striking
examples of them are found in the widely separated
regions of Iceland, New Zealand, Japan and the western
United States. In the volcanic region of New
Zealand geysers and their associated hot springs are
abundant. It was to their action that we owed
the famous white and pink terraces and the warm lake
of Rotomahana which were ruined by the destructive
eruption of Mount Tarawera, already described.
GEYSERS OF THE UNITED STATES
The United States is abundantly supplied
with hot springs, but geysers, outside of the Yellowstone
region, are found only in California and Nevada.
Those of California exist chiefly in Napa Valley, north
of San Francisco, in a canon or defile. Their
waters are impregnated not with silica, but with sulphur,
and they thus approach more nearly in their character
to mud-volcanoes, whose éjections are, in like
manner, much impregnated with that substance.
They are also, like them, collected in groups, there
being no less than one hundred openings within a space
of flat ground a mile square. Owing to their
number and proximity, their individual energy is nothing
like so violent as that of the geysers of Iceland.
Their jets seldom rise higher than 20 or 30 feet; but
so great a number playing within so confined a space
produces an imposing effect. The jets of boiling
water issue with a loud noise from little conical
mounds, around which the ground is merely a crust of
sulphur. When this crust is penetrated, the boiling
water may be seen underneath. The rocks in the
neighborhood of these fountains are all corroded by
the action of the sulphurous vapors. Nevertheless,
within a distance of not more than 50 feet from them,
trees grow without injury to their health.
Few of these fountains, however, are
regular geysers, most of them discharging only steam.
From the Steamboat Geyser this ascends to a height
of from 50 to 100 feet, with a roar like that of the
escape from a steamboat boiler. Associated with
the geysers are numerous hot springs, some clear,
some turbid, and variously impregnated with iron,
sulphur or alum. In Nevada the Steamboat Springs,
as they are designated, exist in Washoe Valley, east
of the Virginian range. They come nearer in character
to the Yellowstone geysers, their waters depositing
true geyserite, or silicious concrétions.
The Volcano Springs, in Lauder County, are also true
geysers, though of small importance. The ground
here is so thickly perforated by holes from which
steam escapes that it looks like a cullender.
THE YELLOWSTONE GEYSERS
The most remarkable geyser country
in the world, alike for the size and the number of
its spouting fountains, is the Yellowstone region in
the northwest part of the Territory of Wyoming, in
the United States, which, by a special act of Congress,
has been reserved as the Yellowstone National Park,
exempt from settlement, purchase or preemption.
Here nearly every form of geyser and unintermittent
hot spring occurs, with deposits of various kinds,
silicious, calcareous, etc. Of the hot springs,
Dr. Peale enumerates 2,195, and considers that within
the limits of the park which is about 54
miles by 62 miles, and includes 3,312 square miles as
many as 3,000 actually exist. The same geologist
notes the existence of 71 geysers in the area mentioned,
though some of the number are only inferred to be
spouting springs from the form of their basins and
the character of the surrounding deposits. Of
this vast collection of still and eruptive springs,
between which there seems every gradation, those which
do not send water into the air are, owing to the magnificent
cascades which they form, often quite as remarkable
as those which take the shape of geysers. The
more striking of the latter may, however, be briefly
mentioned.
In the Gibbon Basin is a geyser of
late origin. In 1878 this consisted of two steam
holes, roaring on the side of a hill, that looked as
if they had recently burst through the surface; and
the gully leading towards the ravine was at that date
filled with sand, which appeared to have been poured
out during an eruption. Dead trees stood on the
line of this sand floor, and others, with their bark
still remaining, and even with their foliage not lost,
were uprooted hard by, everything indicating that
the “steamboat vent,” as it was called,
was of recent formation. In 1875 it had no existence,
but in 1879 the spouting spring which first
opened, it is believed, on the 11th of August in the
preceding year had “settled down to
business as a very powerful flowing geyser,”
with a double period; one eruption occurring every
half hour, and projecting water to the height of 30
feet; the main eruption occurring every six or seven
days, with long continued action, and a column of
nearly 100 feet.
The New Geyser in the same basin is
also of quite recent origin. It consists of two
fissures in the rock, in which the water boils vigorously.
But there is no mound, and the rocks of the fissure
are just beginning to get a coating of the silicious
geyserite deposited from the water, so that it cannot
long have been spouting. Again, in the Grotto
Geyser in the Upper Geyser Basin of Fire
Hole River the main or larger crater is
hollowed into fantastic arches, beneath which are
the grotto-like cavities from which it is named, which
act as lateral orifices for the escape of water during
an eruption. It plays several times in the course
of the twenty-four hours, and sends a column of water
sixty feet high, the eruption lasting an hour.
As yet, however, the force of the water has not been
sufficient, or of sufficiently long duration, to break
through the arches covering the basin or crater.
The Excelsior claimed to be the largest
of its order, which sent water nearly 300 feet into
the air at intervals of about five hours, and of such
volume as to wash away bridges over small streams below was
not, until comparatively recent years, known as a
specially powerful geyser. But if it had for
a time waned in importance, its immense crater, 330
feet in length and 200 feet at the widest part, shows
that at a still earlier date it was a gigantic fountain.
In this deep pit, when the breeze wafted aside the
clouds of steam constantly arising from its surface,
the water could be seen seething 15 or 20 feet below
the surrounding level. Yet into the cauldron
of boiling water a little stream of cold water, from
the melting snow of the uplands, ran unceasingly.
Since 1888 this great geyser has been inactive.
The Castle Geyser is so named on account
of the fancied resemblance which its mound of white
and grey deposit presents to the ruins of a feudal
keep, the crater itself being placed on a cone or turret,
which has a somewhat imposing appearance compared
with the other geysers in the neighborhood. It
throws a column usually about fifty or sixty feet
high, at intervals of two or three hours, but sometimes
the discharge shoots up much higher.
The Giant, in the Upper Geyser Basin,
has a peculiar crater, which has been likened to the
stump of a hollow sycamore tree of gigantic proportions,
whose top has been wrenched off by a storm. This
curious cup is broken down at one side, as though
it had been torn away during an eruption of more than
ordinary violence, and on this side the visitor is
able to look into the crater, if he can contrive to
avoid the jets which are constantly spouted from it.
The periods of rest which it takes are varied, an
eruption often not occurring for several days at a
time; yet when it breaks out it continues playing
for more than three hours, with a volume of water
reaching a height of from 130 to 140 feet. In
the interval little spouts are constantly in progress.
Mr. Stanley saw one eruption which he calculated to
have shot a column of water to the height of more
than 200 feet. At first it seemed as though the
geyser was only making a feint, the discharge which
preceded the great one being merely repeated several
times, followed by a cessation both of the rumbling
noises and of the ejection of water. But soon,
after a premonitory cloud of steam, the geyser began
to work in earnest, the column discharged rising higher
and higher, until it reached the altitude mentioned.
“At first it appeared to labor
in raising the immense volume, which seemed loath
to start on its heavenward tour; but it was with perfect
ease that the stupendous column was held to its place,
the water breaking into jets and returning in glittering
showers to the basin. The steam ascended in dense
volumes for thousands of feet, when it was freighted
on the wings of the winds and borne away in clouds.
The fearful rumble and confusion attending it were
as the sound of distant artillery, the rushing of
many horses to battle, or the roar of a fearful tornado.
It commenced to act at 2 P. M., and continued for an
hour and a half, the latter part of which it emitted
little else than steam, rushing upward from its chambers
below, of which, if controlled, there was enough to
run an engine of wonderful power. The waving to
and fro of such a gigantic fountain, when the column
is at its height,
‘Tinselled o’er in robes of varying hues,’
and glistening in the bright sunlight,
which adorns it with the glowing colors of many a
gorgeous rainbow, affords a spectacle so wonderful
and grandly magnificent, so overwhelming to the mind,
that the ablest attempt at description gives the reader
who has never witnessed such a display but a feeble
idea of its glory.”
A DESCRIPTION OF THE GEYSER AT WORK
The only other geysers in this remarkable
geyserland which we can spare room to notice are those
known as the Giantess, the Beehive, and the Grand.
The Giantess sends a column of water to the height
of 250 feet. An eruption is usually divided into
three periods two preliminary efforts and
a final one, divided from each other by intervals of
between one and two hours, while the intervals of
discharge are very long. Sometimes it does not
play for several weeks. The Beehive, which is
400 feet from the Giantess, gets its name from the
peculiar beehive-like cone which it has formed.
The eruption is also almost unique. It is heralded
by a slight escape of steam, which is followed by a
column of steam and water, shooting to the height
of over 200 feet. The column is somewhat fan-shaped,
but it does not fall in rain, the spray being evaporated
and carried off as steam if, indeed, there
is not more steam than water in the column. The
duration of the discharge is between four and five
minutes, and the interval between two eruptions from
twenty-one to twenty-five hours.
The Grand is one of the most important
in the Upper Geyser basin. Yet, unlike the Grotto,
the Giant, or the Old Faithful, so called
from its frequent and regular eruptions it
has no raised cone or crater, and a much less cavernous
bowl than the Giantess and other geysers. The
column discharged ascends to the height of from eighty
to two hundred feet, and the eruptions last from fifteen
minutes to three-quarters of an hour, with intervals
on an average of from seven to twenty hours. This
fountain is apparently very irregular in its action,
though it is just possible that when the Yellowstone
geysers have been more consecutively studied, it will
be found that these seeming irregularities depend on
the varying supplies of water at different times of
the year.
THE MAMMOTH HOT SPRINGS
The marvellous phenomena of the Yellowstone
region are not confined to geyser action, hot springs
of steady flow being, as above stated, exceedingly
numerous. Of these the most striking are those
known as the Mammoth Hot Springs, whose waters find
their way through underground passages, finally flowing
from an opening as the “Boiling River,”
which empties into the Gardiner River.
These springs are marvels of beauty.
Their terraced bowls, adorned with delicate fret-work,
are among the finest specimens of Nature’s handiwork
in the world, and the colored waters themselves are
startling in their brilliancy. Red, pink, black,
canary, green, saffron, blue, chocolate, and all their
intermediate gradations are found here in exquisite
harmony. The springs rise in terraces of various
heights and widths, having intermingled with their
delicate shades chalk-like cliffs, soft and crumbly,
these latter being the remains of springs from which
the life and beauty have departed. The great
spring is the largest in the country, the water flowing
through three openings into a basin forty feet long
by twenty-five feet wide. From this the hot mineral
waters drip over into lower basins, of gracefully
curved and scalloped outline, the minerals deposited
on the lips of the basin forming stalagmites of variegated
hue, yielding a brilliant and beautiful effect.
The terraced basins bear a close resemblance to the
former New Zealand pink and white terraces, and since
the annihilation of the latter are the most charming
examples in existence of this rare form of Nature’s
artistic handiwork.