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Researchers are uncovering baby volcanoes in Oregon using radar images to analyze unseen magma movements.

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Satellite-based radar images can reveal otherwise-imperceptible heavings of magma beneath Earth's surface. One group of researchers is using the technique to search for baby volcanoes in Oregon (see "A Volcano Is Born" by Karen Wright, Discover, December 2001), with uncertain results. But geophysicist Mark Simons of the California Institute of Technology has uncovered clear radar signatures showing that some allegedly dormant volcanoes in South America's Andes Mountains are alive and possibly dangerous.

Simons and graduate student Matthew Pritchard scanned the Andes using the European Space Agency's ERS1 and ERS2 radar satellites. "In a few orbits, we could survey hundreds of volcanoes," Simons says. He and Pritchard measured the distance between satellite and volcano by bouncing a radar pulse off Earth's surface; then they repeated the process on a later pass. Some volcanic regions thought to be dormant showed a distinct change in distance (seen as color fringes in the images ...

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