NASA should consider entering the tacky disaster film industry. It already has an elevator ad for a low budget movie. "You've heard of the shark tornado, and now you're ready for the shark volcano," NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center said on twitter on Sunday
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Goddard shared an image of the earth taken by Landsat 9 satellite, which showed a disturbance in the ocean. "The Kawachi volcano in the Solomon Islands is home to two kinds of sharks," Goddard explained. "It is also one of the most active undersea volcanoes in the Pacific, where underwater eruptions can be seen through Landsat 9."
According to the data of NASA Earth observation station, kavac began to erupt in October last year, and satellite images show the changes of water color in April and may this year. The summit of the volcano is about 65 feet (20 meters) below the waves.
It is reported that an investigation in 2015 was introduced in detail in a paper published in oceanography, which found that hammerhead sharks and silk sharks live in the high temperature and acidic environment of the crater. "The ecosystem supported by the extreme environment of the Kawachi crater may provide clues as to which types of animals have survived major changes in marine chemistry in the past and which animals will thrive in future marine conditions," the study said
Kawachi has a long history of eruptions, and it seems that it will continue to maintain this continuity.