When the Havre seamount rose to within 3,000 feet of the ocean’s surface in the Pacific (five hundred miles northeast of New Zealand) during and probably for a few years after Noah’s Flood, the hot water and pyroclastics vented upward at such velocity and heat (“the fountains of the deep” see Page titled Natural Selection by Noah’s Flood) that it blasted through the surface high into the sky, proven by the oxidized pyroclastics which fell back down and sank to the seafloor.