Anonymous ID: 4b774a Dec. 31, 2020, 8:59 p.m. No.12261974   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2057 >>2132 >>2166 >>2225 >>2343

Soufriere St Vincent volcano Level Orange Alert

West Indies, a chain of Caribbean Islands.

 

The last time this volano erupted so did Mt Pele (1902)

 

There is a corelation between the eruption of THIS volcano and high cosmic rays. The volcano has a history of major explosive erruptions every 100 years with the last big one in 1902.

The last time it erupted was 1979.

Alert level at La Soufriere volcano raised to Orange in St Vincent.

 

This is a Grand Solar Minimum Volcano

Violent eruptions:

1718- the end of the Munder Minimum

1812- the middle of the Dalton Minimum

1902- the middle of the Centennial Minimum

not violent but notable:

1971- during the Ice Age scare- it's all related to Cosmic Rays

 

"St Vincent is a volcanic island, and part of the arcuate chain of the Lesser Antilles volcanic arc. The active volcano on St Vincent is called the Soufrière; a name that describes its sulfurous nature, and shared by other volcanoes in the Antilles including the Soufrière Hills volcano (Montserrat), and the Soufrière of Guadeloupe. While the geological record of past eruptions of St Vincent stretches back for hundreds of thousands of years, the historical record of known eruptions is short, but dramatic.

 

The first known explosive eruption of St Vincent was in March 1718. By all accounts this was a major eruption, preceded by an extended period of felt earthquakes."

More history about this volcano with major eruptions preceeded by many earthquakes- had those lately

Sauce:

https://blogs.egu.eu/network/volcanicdegassing/2014/01/20/a-volcanic-retrospective-eruptions-of-the-soufriere-st-vincent/