The Yellowstone volcano has primarily produced rhyolite, though some basalt has been noted.
No. Lava tubes generally form with basaltic lava. The rhyolitic lava that the Yellowstone volcano would produce is to viscous.
No volcano has erupted in Yellowstone Park, at least not in recorded history.
Volcanoes produce extrusive igneous rock.
Yellowstone Volcano. Some called it Yellowstone Caldera.
The Yellowstone volcano is actually a supervolcano, and is hidden under the rest of the park. So whenever you go and visit any part of Yellowstone, you are actually walking on top of the volcano itself.
Its because of the super volcano under Yellowstone park
No. Lava tubes generally form with basaltic lava. The rhyolitic lava that the Yellowstone volcano would produce is to viscous.
No. The Yellowstone volcano is neither a mountain nor a composite volcano; it is a caldera.
Given that Yellowstone is in the middle of the United States, it is a mainland volcano.
No. The Yellowstone volcano is 1,500 miles from Pennsylvania. Lava cannot flow that far, and rhyolitic lava such as that produced by the Yellowstone volcano is so viscous that it can can barely flow at all. However, the volcano's eruptions are explosive and produce large amounts of ash. This would be carried by upper level winds and would fall on Pennsylvania.
No. For one thing, the Yellowstone volcano is not a mountain, it is a caldera. It is usually referred to as the Yellowstone caldera or the Yellowstone supervolcano.
No volcano has erupted in Yellowstone Park, at least not in recorded history.
Volcanoes produce extrusive igneous rock.
the bad news is that there isn't a volcano inYellowstone the fact is that the whole of Yellowstone is just the creator wich is huge and makes it a super volcano which is not good at all!!!
The entire park of Yellowstone rest on a super volcano
The Yellowstone Volcano did not last very long. It lasted for about a minute.
yellow stone is a volcano