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Underwater Volcano Oregon: Why Predicted 2025 Eruption Didn’t Happen

Underwater Volcano Oregon: Why Predicted 2025 Eruption Didn’t Happen
Carolyn Gramling 2025-12-22 14:15:00

NEW ORLEANS⁣ — One year ago, scientists made a surprisingly concrete prediction: Before 2025 was ⁤out,they said,Axial volcano — a ​submerged seamount near oregon​ in the Northern Pacific Ocean — would erupt.

That hasn’t ‍happened. But it still might — in 2026.

Scientists haven’t yet come up with a reliable way ‍to forecast a volcanic eruption, especially not months or years in advance. Last year, ‍researchers hoped⁢ they’d identified the‌ right pattern of ⁤data to anticipate Axial’s ⁤eruption. Now, they’re‍ turning back to the data ⁢to hunt for ‍more clues.

A combined ‌analysis of seismic and seafloor inflation data around Axial⁢ seamount could offer a ⁤way to forecast future eruptions, ⁤says geophysicist william Chadwick of Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport. His new analysis kicks ⁤the can just a bit down⁣ the road,suggesting an eruption could happen ​sometime in 2026.

Chadwick‌ reported these findings December 16 at the American Geophysical Union’s​ annual ‍meeting, a​ follow-up of ‌sorts to his prediction⁢ at last year’s meeting that ⁢Axial ‍would‍ erupt⁢ in 2025. in ‌the new study, he analyzed why that‍ prediction might⁣ have been premature, and considered‌ new avenues for researchers ⁤to consider when it ‌comes to eruption ⁣forecasting.

“This whole thing’s been an experiment to see how far ‍we can push the⁣ envelope of long-term [eruption] forecasting,”⁢ he⁤ says. And part of that “is learning from experiance what’s possible⁤ and what’s not possible.”

The previous prediction‌ was‍ based on a repeated and apparently intensifying‌ pattern of‌ seafloor inflation and‌ deflation, linked to the movement of magma⁤ underground. It was a pattern the team had also⁢ seen in 2015 — and used ⁢to successfully predict that Axial ⁤would erupt that year.

Axial‌ seamount ​— about 480 kilometers off the coast of⁣ Oregon and buried beneath the waves — is‌ an excellent test ⁣laboratory: It​ erupts frequently, is peppered with the⁢ most  instrumentation of any underwater volcano‌ and poses no danger⁢ to anybody. And that​ might potentially be‍ exactly what researchers⁣ need if they’re going to determine how and ‍when a volcano’s rumbles and fidgets presage an actual​ eruption.

Axial’s every rumble and sigh has been⁢ logged with‌ underwater sensors sence 1997. And since 2014,a network of submarine fiber-optic cables,bearing an ‌array of 150 instruments,has been delivering data⁢ in real time​ as the ground shakes or the seafloor⁣ around Axial swells or shrinks ‍— both signs of magma on the move. That cabled ​network,part of the National Science Foundation’s ⁤ocean Observatories Initiative,or OOI,spans the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate,a⁤ chunk of oceanic crust off the northwest U.S.‌ coast.

But 2025 has ⁤come and gone,Axial has already swelled higher ​than ⁤it did in 2015,and it’s now clear ‍that that pattern of inflation and deflation‍ alone ‌isn’t ⁢reliable⁣ enough​ to base a⁢ forecast on.‍ The‌ pattern ‍isn’t quite regular enough,and ⁤there isn’t a clear threshold that triggers an eruption.

“Every time we try to anticipate when we’re going to get​ up to that threshold, something changes and we’re wrong,” Chadwick says. “In retrospect, we got lucky‍ in 2015.”

So now what, when it ‍comes to⁣ eruption forecasting? One​ possibility is ‍to look for ⁣a ‌telltale⁢ pattern by analyzing the seafloor deformation and⁤ seismic⁤ data at the same time.

For ⁣example, before the 2015 eruption,⁤ the OOI recorded ⁢a dramatic increase in quake activity as the ground also swelled upward. ‍For several months, there were​ about‌ 10,000 quakes ⁢per‍ centimeter ⁣of seafloor inflation; the inflation was also ⁢rapid, ‌rising at ⁢a rate of⁤ 70 centimeters per year. In 2024, scientists ​saw‍ a brief period of similarly intense quake activity, but it didn’t last. Inflation rates ⁣were also much lower, about 15 ⁤to ‍25 centimeters​ per year.

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assuming the 2015 data represent an eruption threshold, Chadwick said at the ⁤meeting, “we hypothesize that⁢ we need to⁤ get to 500⁤ earthquakes a day before the next eruption is triggered.” ⁤Based on current ‌rates of inflation and seismicity, that threshold could come sometime in 2026.

Other researchers are exploring eruption forecasting‍ based on physics —‌ specifically, ⁣anticipating how and when geologic structures might reach‌ a point of failure. Geophysicists Qinghua Lei⁢ of Uppsala University in Sweden and Didier Sornette of ⁢ETH Zurich have previously developed a physics-based ‍computer model designed to predict ‌moments of geological failure, ⁣such as the slumping of⁤ a landslide or the release⁤ of a burst of⁢ lava.Given‌ existing⁢ monitoring data,they were ⁢able to retrospectively predict several⁣ natural hazard events.The trick now is to figure​ it⁣ out ahead of time.

In November, ‍lei and⁢ Sornette started a new project that takes the real-time OOI cable data and feeds it into their computer model. based on ‌these data, ​the researchers plan to create ⁣monthly prototype eruption ‌forecasts for Axial. As ⁤the project is still in its experimental stage, they won’t release these forecasts to the public⁢ until ⁣after the next eruption.

The success ⁣of ‌these eruption prediction efforts at Axial⁤ hinges on the continued supply of‍ data from the OOI — and it’s⁣ not clear how long the array​ will be able to operate. The Trump administration has​ proposed an 80 percent cut to the program, which is funded through ⁤NSF. Those and other⁤ cuts ⁤to the‌ country’s scientific agencies are in limbo through January.

“It’s been‌ a⁢ bit of a challenging year for us, and for⁣ many people in the sciences, but we’re ⁣still alive and kicking,” says OOI principal investigator James ⁤Edson,⁣ a ‌physical oceanographer with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in​ Massachusetts. Working‍ with NSF, the OOI managed ⁢to garner enough support to keep the array running through the summer of 2026, he told ⁣researchers at an AGU assembly to ⁢discuss⁤ Axial.

Even though Axial’s status remained largely unchanged ‌throughout ‌2025,news stories about the 2025 eruption prediction continued to bubble ‌up throughout the year.“I’ve⁤ been ​amazed, because ⁣we’ve been doing this for years, but the interest⁤ has ⁣really exploded this last‌ year,” Chadwick⁤ says. Some of the stories⁣ have‌ dramatically exaggerated⁢ the⁣ danger the‌ volcano poses. “Several times⁤ I’ve gotten emails from random people who live on the Oregon ⁣coast who are worried.”

If the⁤ new ‌predictions prove true, he may need to brace for more emails.

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