Volcano blows its top 300km off NZ coast

Courtesy GNS Science NZ
Scientists have returned from exploring three submarine volcanoes in the Kermadec Arc where they found evidence of a recent large eruption at one of the volcanoes.
While mapping the Rumble III volcano, they found a marked change in the shape of the summit. A map made in 2007 showed an 800m-wide crater near the top of the submarine volcano.
The new map shows the crater has been filled and the nearby summit cone has been reduced in height by about 100m.
“This suggests there has been a major eruption that collapsed the summit cone and filled the adjacent crater,†said Co-Chief Scientist on the voyage Cornel de Ronde of GNS Science, a division of Crown Research Institute NZ.
Images taken by an underwater camera towed by the research ship show strewn lava boulders covered by black volcanic ash near the summit of the volcano, Dr de Ronde said. Rumble III volcano is about 350km northeast of the Bay of Plenty and sits at a depth of 1.4km.
The eruption is consistent with the fact that a number of the 90 submarine volcanoes along the Kermadec Arc are highly active. Some of the volcanoes along this 2000km underwater volcanic chain are as big as Mt Ruapehu.
The Kermadec Arc runs northeast of New Zealand between the Bay of Plenty and Tonga.

Courtesy GNS Science NZ

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Thanks to underwater cameras, these submarine volcanoes can now be studied and provide useful warning to people living nearby.
You written it pretty well. Thanks god the science came so far that we can study those volcanoes…