Yellowstone explosion sends tourists racing for safety in US
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The explosion occurred in the Biscuit Basin area of the national park. No injuries were reported, but the area remained closed to the public.
PHOTO: YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK
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CHEYENNE - A hydrothermal explosion sent a towering column of boiling water, mud and rock shooting into the air at Yellowstone National Park
No injuries were reported, according to the United States Geological Survey, but the area remained closed to the public.
The explosion occurred around 10am in the Biscuit Basin area of the park. Several tourists captured video footage of the event and in some footage, an adult can be heard shouting at children to run.
The explosion was a couple of miles north of the Old Faithful geyser, which regularly shoots steam into the sky.
“This is quite a bit different than Old Faithful,” said Dr Michael Poland, the scientist in charge at the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, who said the hydrothermal event took place near Black Diamond Pool in Biscuit Basin.
Explosions like the one on July 23 happen when water suddenly turns to steam in the underground “plumbing” beneath the park’s hydrothermal system, Dr Poland said.
The change can be caused by a major event like an earthquake.
“That’s not the case here,” he said. “Instead, what we had was a very localised change in this plumbing system. Pressure can build, and you can get an explosion like this.”
Similar explosions took place in the Norris Geyser Basin in 2024 and at Biscuit Basin in 2009.
In a statement, US Geological Survey officials assured that the episode was not connected to a change in volcanic activity, either. (Yes, Yellowstone also has volcanic activity.)
Hydrothermal explosions in the park are fairly common – taking place as often as twice a year, frequently in the backcountry – but can go undetected other than by monitoring equipment, according to Dr Poland.
This explosion, however, was fully documented by tourists with smartphones. “It’s really quite dramatic,” Dr Poland said of the footage.
More than a dozen miles of wooden boardwalk allow tourists to view the park’s vaunted thermal features, such as geysers, hot springs and mud pots.
The thermal features attract crowds despite – or because of – their sharp sulphuric smell and their otherworldly bubbling and spouting.
Since Yellowstone opened in 1872, around two dozen people have been injured or killed by scalding thermal features, more than double the number harmed in encounters with wildlife, according to the US Geological Survey.
But none of the episodes were connected to unexpected activity like what took place at Biscuit Basin.
“There hasn’t been anyone killed by explosions like these,” Dr Poland said.
Most incidents are caused by burns; many of the hot springs in the park are hotter than 65 deg C.
In 2022, a human foot
In June, a 21-year-old tourist was sentenced to a week in jail for walking off a path near Steamboat Geyser, the world’s tallest active geyser, which can shoot water more than 90m into the air, far higher than Old Faithful. A park employee had seen the tourist ignore signs that it was illegal to stray from the path. NYTIMES

