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Thread: Cumbre Vieja volcano post eruption phase! Time to say goodbye for volcano-thank you for all support :) (Page 939)

Midwest Skeptic
User ID: 80570749
United States
09/29/2021 12:07 AM

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I'll have to watch that one. Thanks for bringing it up.

I had forgotten about a conversation I had one here, years ago, with ST in BG. The alien guy? He posted that there was an inactive volcano under a golf course in Bowling Green. I got mad at him because I grew up in the area and never before or since had heard of it, BUT, I've never forgotten about it. I've never found verification and I kind of forgot about it, but now that we've moved back up here, I'll have to do some digging again.

We never learned about possible volcanic activity here in school, just the glacial theories, mostly because of the Glacial Grooves on Kelley's Island. We used to be able to walk on them and check them out. Last time we were over there, they were fenced off and a group was studying them.
Quoting: Texan Buckeye

Maybe bring a 4 foot level, or even a laser level to see how little elevation is gained going north, within those grooves. Also look for fumerole artifacts. In the road cuts, you can see evidence of volcanic ash as the rain erodes the soil they cut through to make the road. For me, there's a layer of exposed ash laden soil near a place formerly called Carriage Hill, which is within Athens. After seeing the erosion of ash laden soil that was erupted by Mt St Helens, it's easy to distinguish.

Some tree species can do better than others in different soil types, which can help you to see if the soil changes over an area. For instance, in my region of Ohio, there is a particular tree of the white oak group, forgot the name at the moment, that likes limestone, and only grows within the exposed layer on that hillside.

In reference to the video I cited above, we have dolomite nodules in the clay at the top of the ridge here. But our brine water begins at 500 feet down in the ground. Fresh water is on top of that.

Our oil bearing Clinton Sandstone formation is at 3000 feet down, here, and gradually comes to the surface in West Virginia. Many rock climbers like to clamber all over it. I think it's down by the New River Gorge.
 Quoting: The Starbuckian


Ohio imo has had some absolutely HUGE earthquakes in the past, though because of the constant rain and weathering with deep top soil everywhere the indications have obviously been covered up in the surface terrain over time and NO BIG ONES have been recorded since the White Man arrived in that area - the first explorers came through beginning in the early 1700's.

In Wood County, not too far from Bowling Green (where BG in Bowling Green who posts here appears to be) there is a place to the east of Bowling Green (12-15 miles called "sand hill" which is the highest terrain in Wood County ... it literally IS a SAND HILL that covers about 30-50 acres and is about 80'-120' ABOVE the absolutely flat surrounding land.

To my eye it appears to have been a HUGE SAND BLOW from a HUGE earthquake. There is nothing else like it that I know of within that entire NW Ohio area, most of the rest of the soil is deep loam, ... and I speculate that before it got worn down by erosion it must have been at least twice as high, maybe three times higher, than it is today. Potentially an indication (imo a real indication) of a very very large EQ hitting that area in the last 500 years.
 Quoting: Midwest Skeptic


Interesting!! Now y'all really are sending me down a rabbit hole. Do you know offhand about where the sand hill is? When I was a kid, my family summer camped at a campground off of Rt. 6 and we drive through there frequently.
 Quoting: Texan Buckeye


Been there, climbed up it out of curiosity, but that was more than a decade ago and not sure I could tell you exactly where it is now. Just look at an elevation map for Wood County and it is THE HIGHEST point in Wood County, East or ESE of BG 8-12 miles as best I can recall. HUGE sand hill ... in an area where the soil is NOT sandy.
 Quoting: Midwest Skeptic
 
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