Steamboat Geyser hardly ever erupts; at least – until 2018. It’s eruptions were irregularly timed but could be years, even decades apart. It now erupts every few days.
This is one of many signs of a potentially catastrophic supervolcano event at Yellowstone
and of moving magma beneath the crust and Earth Changes in general (including other more active volcanos in Hawaii and around the world) that could be signs of a coming POLE SHIFT.
Steamboat Geyser, in Yellowstone National Park‘s Norris Geyser Basin, is the world’s tallest currently-active geyser. During major eruptions, water may be thrown more than 300 feet (91 m) into the air.
Steamboat’s major eruptions last from 3 to 40 minutes, and are followed by powerful jets of steam. Steamboat does not erupt on a predictable schedule, with recorded intervals between major eruptions ranging from four days to fifty years.
The geyser was dormant from 1911 to 1961.
The most recent eruption of Steamboat Geyser occurred on June 15th, 2018 at 4.55pm. Eruptions from 1990 to current years include:
- June 4, 1990
- October 2, 1991 – (1 year 120 days)
- May 2, 2000 – (8 years 213 days)
- April 26, 2002 – (1 year 359 days)
- September 13, 2002 – (140 days)
- March 26, 2003 – (194 days)
- April 27, 2003 – (32 days)
- October 22, 2003 – (178 days)
- May 23, 2005 – (1 year 213 days)
- July 31, 2013 – (8 years 212 days)
- September 3, 2014 – (1 year 34 days)
(Notice the trend above: it could be years between eruptions.)
Suddenly – In 2018, Steamboat Geyser entered an much more active period with ten eruptions recorded between March 15th and June 15th.
- March 15, 2018 – (3 years 193 days)
- April 19, 2018 – (35 days)
- April 27, 2018 – (8 days)
- May 4, 2018 – (7 days)
- May 13, 2018 – (9 days)
- May 19, 2018 – (6 days)
- May 27, 2018 – (8 days)
- June 4, 2018 – (8 days)
- June 11, 2018 – (7 days)
- June 15, 2018 – (4 days)
- Something big is happening beneath the crust of the Earth.