Want this question answered?
A geyser. Old Faithful, a geyser in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, USA.
A geyser. As in Old Faithful geyser in Yellowstone National Park
Geyser is a noun describing a hot spring that spouts water and steam. Example sentence: The main attractions to him at Yellowstone were the geysers. The water from the geyser was injuriously hot.
Fountain like jets of water and steam
A geyser (like Old Faithful in Yellowstone Park) is a spray of water and steam. It would extinguish most fires.
It is because of the pressure below the earth.
Fountain like jets of water and steam
Water is heated by an underground volcano and boils.
Old Faithful is a geyser, a spring that from time to time shoots a column of boiling water in the air. It is the most famous of the 500 geysers in Yellowstone Park, which is in the US. It "performs" 20 to 23 times a day, and each eruption lasts about five minutes. Old Faithful shoots up to 8,400 gallons of water as high as 170 feet. The Yellowstone geysers sit on top of a volcano, which heats underground water to a boiling point.Old Faithful at Yellowstone National Park, is a cone geyser. Located in Wyoming, this geyser was 1st named in 1870.
A geyser - A fountain of hot water and steam that shoots into the air A fumarole - A "geyser" in which only steam escape So the different is geyser shoot out steam and a fumarole escape
A geyser is usually caused by heat from an underground volcano that heats the water into steam quickly. For example Old Faithful, a geyser in Yellowstone, is located above one of the biggest volcanoes in the world, classified as a Supervolcano.
130 to 180 feet in the air