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  • Deep beneath your feet

  • is a subterranean melting pot.

  • A fiery inferno

  • ready to boil over at any moment.

  • Anywhere

  • or anytime.

  • Imagine that today is the day

  • the ground beneath your feet gave way,

  • and the Earth's crust rips open.

  • Giant rifts cause unparalleled destruction,

  • and city streets are covered

  • in scorching lava.

  • Things are about to get a little toasty.

  • Our planet is geologically active.

  • The bad news is, we can't tell when,

  • or where, something called

  • a large igneous province

  • (or LIP) could form.

  • LIPs are geological features formed

  • when a massive amount of magma

  • flows onto the Earth's surface.

  • This can result in regional-scale uplift,

  • continental rifting,

  • breaking up the ground,

  • and climate changes.

  • LIPs do some major spring cleaning,

  • but their house is the Earth itself.

  • Most of us know about an asteroid

  • hitting the Earth and wiping out the dinosaurs,

  • but most people don't know that

  • the Earth nearly got devastated

  • by a large igneous province

  • that formed in Siberia 250 million years ago.

  • Now, imagine that we had to deal with

  • a colossal LIP like that today.

  • Urban areas would be decimated by the rift,

  • causing extensive destruction.

  • And those quakes?

  • They're just the preview.

  • Next, the lava makes its grand entrance.

  • Once here, it's on the warpath.

  • Farmland needed for raising crops

  • would be incinerated.

  • Bodies of water like lakes, streams and rivers

  • would be vaporized if there was enough lava.

  • And depending on how fast the lava flows,

  • endangered species would be wiped out

  • if they couldn't relocate in time.

  • It would also devastate the economy.

  • Schools, businesses and hospitals

  • would be ravaged,

  • along with infrastructure like highways,

  • power generating facilities,

  • gas lines and water mains.

  • And that beautiful new house you bought?

  • It's covered in lava.

  • Your new car?

  • It's under lava.

  • And what about you?

  • Well, according to Oregon State University,

  • lava moves on a flat slope,

  • like Hawaii's Mount Kilauea,

  • at a maximum of 10 km/h (6.2 mph).

  • The average speed people walk at

  • is 5 km/h (3.1 mph)

  • and average running speed is about

  • 13 km/h (8 mph).

  • So if you were good at track and field,

  • now's your time to shine.

  • Lava flowing downhill,

  • like Mount Nyiragongo,

  • can speed along at

  • 100 km/h (62 mph).

  • Good luck outrunning that.

  • In addition to the extreme heat

  • burning, melting, and destroying

  • anything it touches,

  • lava releases particles into the air

  • and toxic gases such as

  • sulfur, carbon dioxide and halogen.

  • Even if you can get out of the lava's path,

  • you're still in danger from breathing the gas

  • and particles in the air.

  • How long can you hold your breath?

  • So with all that,

  • Well, there's no how-to manual or strategy

  • to combat the formation of an LIP.

  • How and when they form

  • is a pretty complex subject,

  • requiring a lot of scientific disciplines

  • to understand.

  • But, it's not like it's really going to happen,

  • right?

  • Well, it's definitely possible.

  • In 2018, Mount Kilauea in Hawaii erupted

  • and destroyed more than 700 homes.

  • Now, Kilauea is a volcano

  • rather than a large igneous province,

  • but it makes it clear that magma

  • is still flowing to Earth's surface,

  • and there's plenty more down

  • in the Earth's core and mantle.

  • So, maybe we should start planning for it.

  • There are procedures in place to deal with

  • volcanic eruptions and earthquakes,

  • so why can't there be one for LIP's?

  • Our planet is going to continuously

  • shift and change forever.

  • It makes us wonder what other mysteries

  • could be brought to the surface

  • with these geological shifts.

  • What if the entire planet was cut in half?

Deep beneath your feet

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