Yellowstone National Park - West Thumb and Grant Village

West Thumb Geyser Basin
The West Thumb Geyser Basin, including Potts Basin to the north, is unique in
that it is the largest geyser basin on the shores of Yellowstone Lake. The heat
source of the thermal features in this location is thought to be relatively
close to the surface, only 10,000 feet down! The West Thumb of Yellowstone Lake
was formed by a large volcanic explosion that occurred approximately 150,000
years ago (125,000-200,000). The resulting collapsed volcano, called a caldera
("boiling pot" or caldron), later filled with water forming an extension of
Yellowstone Lake. The West Thumb is about the same size as another famous
volcanic caldera, Crater Lake in Oregon, but much smaller than the great
Yellowstone caldera which formed 600,000 years ago. It is interesting to note
that West Thumb is a caldera within a caldera.
Ring fractures formed as the magma chamber bulged up under the surface of the
earth and subsequently cracked, releasing the enclosed magma. This created the
source of heat for the West Thumb Geyser Basin today.
West Thumb Thermal Features
The thermal features at West Thumb are found not only on the lake shore, but
extend under the surface of the lake as well. Several underwater geysers were
discovered in the early 1990s and can be seen as slick spots or slight bulges in
the summer. During the winter, the underwater thermal features are visible as
melt holes in the icy surface of the lake. The ice averages about three feet
thick during the winter.
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