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Lobby > Exhibits > Hot Water Treasures > Types of Thermal Features > Geysers > Cone vs Fountain Geysers

Geysers

AGING A GEYSER

  • Perpetual Spouters
  • Intermittent Springs
  • Cone vs Fountain
  • Aging a Geyser
  • How Geysers Change
  • Geyser Hall of Fame
  • Hot springs and geysers are always changing due to many factors, making it difficult to calculate the age of a single hydrothermal feature.

    Basing a geyser’s age on the size of its cone is inaccurate. Sinter usually forms at a rate of less than 1 inch (2.5 cm) per 100 years, but there are places in Yellowstone where the deposition rate is much greater. Also, a geyser may become dormant for a number of years and stop depositing sinter altogether or, conversely, experience a period of very frequent eruptions with exceptionally heavy deposition. The best that can be said is that a geyser with a large cone is probably quite old.

    Steam escapes the cone of Castle geyser

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    This work is supported by

    National Science Foundation    Yellowstone Park Foundation

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