【Watch Playboy Playmates Unwrapped (2001)】
The Watch Playboy Playmates Unwrapped (2001)blast was astonishing.
When the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano erupted on Jan. 15, it sent shock waves around the planet. The imagery awed earth scientists. And now, researchers have found the eruption pumped enough water vapor into the atmosphere to fill a whopping 58,000 swimming pools— an amount never before observed.
The water reached a layer of the atmosphere called the stratosphere, higher than where big jetliners fly. The stratosphere exists between some eight to 33 miles above Earth's surface.
You May Also Like
"We’ve never seen anything like it."
"We’ve never seen anything like it,” Luis Millán, an atmospheric scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory who led the new research, said in a statement. Millán and his team used observations from NASA’s Aura satellite, an instrument that tracks gases in Earth's atmosphere, to confirm the extreme water injection into the atmosphere.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.

All that water from a single eruption will have a planetary, though small and temporary, climate impact. That's because water vapor is a greenhouse gas, meaning it traps heat on the planet, similar to carbon dioxide, which is now skyrocketing in Earth's atmosphere. This water vapor impact will "not be enough to noticeably exacerbate climate change effects," NASA said.
(Today's climate change is largely driven by human actions, not natural events like volcanic eruptions.)
Where did this bounty of water — which was nearly four times the amount the colossal 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo blew into the stratosphere — come from? Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai is a submarine volcano, meaning the basin where the eruption occurs is underwater. It lies nearly 500 feet under the surface, giving the eruption vast amounts of water to violently blow into the sky.
Related Stories
- Why the sun isn't causing today's climate change
- Climate change will ruin train tracks and make travel hell
- Why the U.S. will get a whole lotta sea level rise
- Scientists reveal the wild history of Earth’s CO2 since the dinosaurs died
- The future of Hawaii's Kilauea volcano is written in the Big Island's past
If the eruption happened deeper, the enormous mass of seawater would have "muted" this immensely explosive eruption, NASA noted. But all the right elements came together, creating a blast that continues to amaze scientists.
Earth is wild.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
The Ideal Smartphone for 2017
2025-06-27 00:22Best food delivery deal: Prime members $5 off $25 at Grubhub
2025-06-27 00:15Popular Posts
11 Tech Products That Were Supposed to Fail... But Didn't
2025-06-27 00:29Volkswagen, Xpeng expand electric vehicle partnership · TechNode
2025-06-27 00:07X's best reactions to Trump's 34 felony convictions
2025-06-26 23:22New TikTok guidelines target weight loss drugs
2025-06-26 22:48Featured Posts
China authority sets a new industry standard for cross
2025-06-26 22:55Best Presidents' Day deal: Save $250 on Peloton Bike
2025-06-26 21:56Popular Articles
Tips for Playing PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds
2025-06-27 00:24Meta is using your posts to train AI. It's not easy to opt out.
2025-06-27 00:14Wooden satellite could be orbiting the Earth by 2021
2025-06-26 23:03Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (158)
Fashion Information Network
Best free ChatGPT courses
2025-06-27 00:35Miracle Information Network
Redmi introduces Turbo 3, its first phone with Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 processor · TechNode
2025-06-27 00:24Heat Information Network
Alibaba to test rocket package delivery service with China’s startup Space Epoch · TechNode
2025-06-27 00:11Fun Fight Information Network
Amazon Prime members can order Grubhub delivery right from the app. Here's how it works.
2025-06-26 22:39Heat Information Network
Assassin's Creed Origins: How Heavy is It on Your CPU?
2025-06-26 22:08