|
Sprinkled amid the hot springs are the rarest fountains
of all, the geysers. What makes them rare and distinguishes them from
hot springs is that somewhere, usually near the surface in the plumbing
system of a geyser, there are one or more constrictions.
View an animation of how geysers work. Expanding steam bubbles generated from the rising hot
water build up behind these constrictions, ultimately squeezing through
the narrow passageways and forcing the water above to overflow from the
geyser. The release of water at the surface prompts a sudden decline in
pressure of the hotter waters at great depth, triggering a violent chain
reaction of tremendous steam explosions in which the volume of rising,
now boiling, water expands 1,500 times or more. This expanding body of
boiling superheated water bursts into the sky as one of Yellowstone’s
many famous geysers. There are more geysers here than anywhere else on earth. Old
Faithful, certainly the most famous geyser, is joined by numerous others
big and small, named and unnamed. Though born of the same water and
rock, what is enchanting is how differently they play in the sky.
Riverside Geyser shoots at an angle across the Firehole River, often
forming a rainbow in its mist. Castle erupts from a cone shaped like the
ruins of some medieval fortress. Grand explodes in a series of powerful
bursts, towering above the surrounding trees. Echinus spouts up and out
to all sides like a fireworks display of water. And Steamboat, the
largest in the world, pulsates like a massive steam engine in a rare,
but remarkably memorable eruption, reaching heights of 300 to 400 feet.
Some of the geysers that can be found in Yellowstone National Park are
listed below.
|