homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Volcanic eruption created a new island that's now visible from space

It formed off the coast of Japan at the end of October.

Fermin Koop
November 13, 2023 @ 10:56 pm

share Share

Image credits: ESA.

An underwater volcanic explosion last month created a new island in the Pacific Ocean that is now visible from space. Satellite images from the European Space Agency (ESA) show the new landmass sitting one kilometer off the coast of Japan’s Iwo Jima Island. However, experts believe the island may not actually last for much longer.

New land

It all started about three weeks ago when an unnamed undersea volcano abruptly erupted. Within 10 days, ash and rocks accumulated on the shallow seabed, gradually rising above the sea surface.

By early November, a new island in Japan was born, measuring about 100 meters in diameter and as high as 20 meters above sea level. The site has featured many eruptions of steam and lava in recent years, researchers from the University of Tokyo said in a news release.

The latest satellite image was taken by the Landsat 9 satellite on November 3rd. The satellite, launched by NASA in 2021, spotted the island from its position 705 kilometers above the Earth. This image was then compared with previous observations of the region collected by the same satellite on October 18th, when the island didn’t exist.

Yuji Usui, an analyst in the Japan Meteorological Agency’s volcanic division, told AP that volcanic activity in the area has subsided and that the island has shrunken as its structures are easily washed away by waves. He said experts are still analyzing the development but anticipating that the island won’t likely survive much longer.

It’s not the first time in recent years that undersea volcanoes and seismic activity have formed new islands. In 2013, an eruption in the Pacific Ocean south of Tokyo created an island. In the same year, an island surfaced after an earthquake in Pakistan. Then, in 2015, another island was created due to the eruption of a submarine volcano near the coast of Tonga.

There are approximately 1,350 potentially active volcanoes on land worldwide, according to the US Geological Survey. In addition to these, scientists have identified thousands of active submarine volcanoes, with the belief that there could be many more beneath the waves — potentially hundreds for every land-based volcano. We may yet see more islands popping up.

share Share

AI-designed autonomous underwater glider looks like a paper airplane and swims like a seal

An MIT-designed system lets AI evolve new shapes for ocean-exploring robots.

Bees are facing a massive survival challenge. Could AI help them?

Our tiny friends are in trouble and it's because of us.

NASA finally figures out what's up with those "Mars spiders"

They're not actual spiders, of course, but rather strange geological features.

Cycling Is Four Times More Efficient Than Walking. A Biomechanics Expert Explains Why

The answer lies in the elegant biomechanics of how our bodies interact with this wonderfully simple machine.

We’re Starting to Sound Like ChatGPT — And We Don’t Even Realize It

Are chatbots changing our vocabulary? There's increasing evidence this is the case.

Scientists Just Showed How Alien Life Could Emerge in Titan's Methane Lakes

What if the ingredients of life could assemble on a methane world?

Can Dogs Really Smell Parkinson’s? These Two Good Boys Say Yes

Our best friend is even more awesome than we thought.

Scientists 3D Printed Microscopic Elephants and Barcodes Inside Cells for the First Time

What happens when you 3D-print an elephant and a microlaser inside a living cell?

AI-Powered Surgical Robot Performed a Full Operation With Zero Help From Humans

An AI robot performed gallbladder surgery without human help, and it worked every time.

These 18 Million-Year-Old Teeth Contain the Oldest Proteins Ever and They Came From Giant Prehistoric Beasts

The oldest protein fragments ever recovered challenge what we thought we knew about fossil decay.