Yellowstone: World’s largest acidic geyser erupts for first time since 2020

A geyser is a spring of water which has been heated geothermally, and which erupts at various rates.
It is formed from a tube-like hole that goes down into the Earth’s surface and is filled with water. When the water at the bottom, which is near molten rock called magma, heats in the tube it begins to boil and is forced upwards and erupts.
After eruption, the water slowly goes back down into the tube. Then the process starts again.
The Echinus Geyser used to erupt at regular intervals, which is why viewing platforms were built around it.
In the 1970s, the geyser would erupt regularly at 40 to 80 minute intervals. In the decades after, the eruptions would sometimes last up to 90 minutes, blasting water as high as 75ft (23m) into the air.
The eruptions “could be vertical or inclined, occasionally soaking onlookers with warm water”.
But the eruptions became less consistent, with only one recorded in 2018, one in 2019 and two in 2020.
The eruptions resumed on 7 February, and have now returned to 2017-era rates. These eruptions have lasted for up to three minutes, with water heights reaching up to 30ft.
It’s unknown whether the geyser will continue to erupt during the busy summer tourist season.
“It’s probably not too likely given the geyser’s tendency to wake up for a month or two before going back to sleep, and there were no eruptions during the last few days of February so it might already have gone quiet,” researchers say.




