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| Photograph courtesy of Matthew Pritchard/ESA (3). |
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 at right), indicating that somethingmost likely a buildup of magmahad moved the ground from below. Simons is most excited about the results for Lazufre, a 20-mile-wide circular deformation on the border between Chile and Argentina, which is sinking about one inch a year. Lazufre may be a caldera, a cavern that feeds volcanoes with magma. "Calderas can collapse and produce enormous eruptions," says Simons. He and Pritchard plan to conduct a hands-on seismic survey at Lazufre to confirm that something big is brewing.



