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Mount St. Helens Location: Washington, United States Latitude: 46.20 N
Longitude: 122.18 W height: 2,549 meters or 8,364 feet - 9,677 feet before May
18, 1980 Type: Stratovolcano Number of eruptions in past 200 years: 2-3 Latest
Eruptions: Between 1660-1700, around 1800-1802, 1831, 1835, 1842-1844,
1847-1854, 1857, 1980-? Present thermal activity: strong steaming Nickname:
Mount Fuji of the West Remarks: continuous intermittent activity since 1980 with
occasional eruptions of steam and ash; occasional pyroclastic flows;
intermittent dome forming. MSH is considered a young volcano that developed over
the last 40,000 years and is one of the most active volcanoes in the Cascade
Range. Geologists predicted that the volcano would erupt before the year 2000.
The May 18, 1980 eruption of Mount SH was the most destructive in the history of
the United States. In a matter of hours, MSH caused loss of lives and widespread
destruction of valuable property because of the avalanche, lateral blast and
mudflows. On March 20, 1980, starting with an earthquake that was followed by
many others, MSH became active again after a quiet period of 123 years. On March
27, 1980, there was a huge explosion and MSH began blowing ash and steam. This
lasted until May 14, 1980. The explosion in March opened up two craters that
quickly became one huge crater. While this was happening, an enormous bulge on
the north side of the mountain top appeared. It grew about six feet each day.
Geologist kept measuring the bulge, recording the earthquakes and sampling the
ash and gases. By May, the bulge was 300 feet wide and more than one mile in
length. On May 18 at 8:32 in the morning, Mount St.. Helens erupted taking the
top 1,200 feet off the volcano. The eruption went on until nightfall. The area
of destruction was 230 square miles and was one of the largest landslides ever
recorded in history. The blast was preceded by two months of intense activity
that included over 10,000 earthquakes, hundreds of small phreatic (steam blasts)
, explosions and the north side bulge. A magnitude 5.1 earthquake below the
volcano at 8:32 am started the eruption.
MSH is still a potentially dangerous
and active volcano even though it has been quiet since 1995. In the last 515
years there have been four major eruptions and dozens of lesser eruptions. Two
of the eruptions were only two years apart. In 1480, the eruption was about five
times larger than the one in May 1980. There have been even larger eruptions
during MSH' 50,000 year lifetime. After the May 18, 1980 eruption, there have
been five smaller explosive eruptions over a five month period. Since then,
there have been 16 dome building eruptions through October 1986 when the new
dome in the crater was formed. As the mountain was torn open, the pressure in
inside was suddenly relieved. The rock shattered inside the mountain was
exploded out the top at speeds over 200 miles per hour. The blast was so strong
that it leveled whole forest of fir trees. Geologist call this a stone wind
since the winds carried the rocks form the blast with them. The rocks gave the
winds extra force that let them flatten the trees. 150 square miles of land was
leveled. The edges of this area also lost their forested areas from the heat of
the blast and the fires it caused. The original blast of the volcano only lasted
10 to 15 minutes. It quickly started up again. A dark cloud of ash and gases
went up for miles into the sky and spread for miles in every direction, but
mostly eastward. Forest fires broke out everywhere. After abut four hours, the
color of the ash became much lighter since the volcano was now throwing out new
magma instead of old rock. The temperature of the volcanic flow was
approximately 1000 degrees and was traveling extremely fast....about 100 miles
per hour. The volcanic flows went on until late in the afternoon. These flows
triggered an avalanche. The avalanche poured rocks, tress and dirt into nearby
Spirit Lake and then downward to the valley of the North Fork of Toutle River.
The ice and snow caps that melted caused mudflows. The mud traveled down the
same path. It was incredibly destructive.
The mudflows tore down houses, steel
bridges and blocked the Columbia River with its debris. The next day showed a
very different MSH. The mountain had lost more that three quarter of a cubic
mile of rock and was now 1,200 feet shorter. What used to be a lush green slope
was now a gray wasteland that looked like the surface of the moon. Mount St.
Helens was built by many eruptions over thousands of years. With each eruption,
hot rock from inside the earth forced its way to the surface. This type of rock
is called magma. Once the magma reaches the surface of the earth it is called
lava. With some eruptions, the magma was liquid so the lava flowed out of the
volcano and hardened. With others, the magma was thick so it burst violently
with sprays of molten rock. It rained down as tiny bits of rock, (ash) and as
rocks puffed up by gases (pumice). The two types of lava have Hawaiian names. Aa
is a sharp stone that cools down to a surface that is hard to walk on. Aa occurs
from high lava fountains. The lava chunks cool in the air and cannot form into
flows when they land. Pahoehoe is a much smoother stone and dries into tubes
that are sometimes hollow. Pahoehoe happens when eruptions are at high
temperatures and low viscosity. The low viscosity lets the lava flow easily and
a skin is formed on top. Lava that hardens is called pumice. The speed of both
types of flows are hard to tell apart, but Aa is faster than Pahoehoe. A
Pahoehoe flow moves around one yard a minute but with a slope it can move up to
400 yards per minute or 14 miles per hour. Aa flows are usually 61/2 to 16 ½
feet thick, and Pahoehoe flows are about one foot thick. The width of both types
of flows is usually around 100 yards wide. Because lava moves so slowly it is
seldom dangerous to people. It moves about two to three miles per hour. NAMED
for: Mount St. Helens was named for the British diplomat Alleyne Fitzherbert
(1753-1839) whose title was Baron St. Helens. The mountain was named by
Commander George Vancouver and the officers of the H.M.S. Discovery while they
were surveying the northern Pacific coast form 1792- 1794 Location Mt. St. H is
part of the Cascade Range which is a chain of volcanoes that runs from Northern
California northward to British Columbia. MSH is about 95 miles south of
Seattle, Washington MSH was 9,677 ft high before its eruption in 1980. It is now
8,364 feet high and about six miles wide at its base. The eruptions from this
volcano were the first to happen in the continental United States except for
Alaska since 1921 when Lassen Peak last erupted. MSH is 34 miles west of Mount
Adams in the eastern part of the Cascade range.
These brother and sister
volcanic mountains are bout 50 miles from Mount Rainier. Mount Hood, the nearest
major volcanic peak in Oregon, is about 60 miles southeast of MSH. The other
volcanoes in the Cascade range are Mount Rainier, Mount Baker, Mount Adams,
Mount Hood, Mount Jefferson, Three Sisters, Newbury, Mount Mazama, Mount Shasta,
Medicine Lake Highland and Lassen Peak. MSH has erupted many times in the past
4,500 years, but was inactive from 1857 until its eruption in 1980. The volcanic
eruptions in the Cascade Range have been: Mount Baker: 1870 Mount Rainier Mount
St. Helens: 1980, 1831-11857 Mount Adams: 3,000-4,000 years ago Mount Hood: 1865
Mount Jefferson: 1030 years ago Three Sisters: 2500 years ago Newbury: 1400
years ago Mount Mazama: 6600 years ago Mount Shasta: 1840, 1786 Lassen Peak:
1914-1921 Medicine Lake Highland: 1910 The Volcanic Explosivity Index, or VEI
describes the size of volcanoes based on three observations. A volcano is rated
VEI -2, VEI -3 etc. on its violence of eruption, height of the plume that shoots
out of the vent, and the volume of materials ejected from it. MSH was rated a
VEI-5. Like a Richter scale in measuring earthquakes, the VEI rates volcanoes.
Only once in a decade do VEI-5 events like MSH happen. The volcano devastated
hundreds of square miles and created a local catastrophe where most volcanoes of
this size are much larger in their scale of destruction. Mount St. Helens was a
Plinian eruption which is the least common type of eruption. Plinian eruptions
have the shortest outburst and cause the most damage and destruction, Plinian
eruptions that send out ash that covers hundreds of square miles are called
ultra Plinian. There have been 19 Plinian eruptions in history. Plinian
Eruptions The plume height is more that 25 km or more than 15.5 miles high. The
Volcanic Explosivity Index rating is VEI 5 and the violence of eruption is
categorized as Paroxysmal. The volume is 668,900 cubic miles. Plinian eruptions
are named after Pliny the Elder who watched the Mount Vesuvius eruption in A.D.
79. Plinian eruptions are sometimes called Vesuvian eruptions.
They blast out
tons of materials in a blast that is the most powerful force on earth. The
explosion tears apart the mountain and the hot gas filled clouds that form set
off lightening and thunderstorms. So much ash is released in Plinian eruptions
that it is carried by the wind around the entire planet. The ash forms a layer
around the Earth, blocking out some of the suns energy and brings cooler
temperatures to the Earth. Mudflows Mudflows are very dangerous. As they melt
the ice and snowcap on the mountain, they rush down the mountain's side taking
everything with them. They become very thick and cement like and bury everything
in their pathway. The mudflows from MSH raced down the north face of the
mountain at ninety miles per hour. At the bottom of the mountain it slowed down
too thirty miles per hour. The mudflows was forty- four to sixty-six feet deep.
When the water drained away over three feet of mud was left behind. The mudflows
not only destroyed all the trees and plants, but also killed thousands of
animals including deer, elk and beers. Different sources say that 57 or 62
people were killed form the eruption of MSH including the volcanologist David
Johnston, a member of the U.S. Geological Survey team at MSH. The lateral
blasts, avalanche, mudflows and flooding caused huge amounts of damage to the
land and city. All buildings and structures in the area of Spirit Lake were
buried. More than 200 houses were destroyed, leaving many people homeless. Tens
of thousands of acres of forest, recreational areas, bridges, roads and trails
were destroyed. Wildlife suffered huge losses. The Washington state Department
of Game estimated that 7,000 big game animals (beer, elk and deer) died in the
area, as did all birds and small mammals. Volcanoes can be very destructive but
in the long run they are helpful. Because the ash s rich in potassium and
phosphorus it helps to grow very healthy plants and crops. Volcanic heat
energizes most of the world's thermal areas and hot springs.
Volcanoes are also
responsible for creating much of the mineral wealth on earth. The hot water
underground removes minerals from the magma dn deposits them in the earth's
crust. They form veins of silver, gold, zinc, copper and lead. Because of the
plate movements, some minerals that were deposited on ancient sea floors are now
accessible to mining. Diamonds are also created by volcanic activity and are
fund in eroded volcanic pipes or tubes. The May 18 eruption wiped out most large
forms of life on the north side of the mountain. Life began to reemerge in the
form of bacteria, fungi, weeds, seeds, insects, spiders and pocket gophers. Bt
the end of summer 1981, life was returning to the volcano. Volcanic eruptions
are important to life on Earth because they add gasses to the atmosphere and
water to the ocean. Volcanoes also build land mass. Floods of lava have built
large area of continents like the Columbia Plateau in the Pacific Northwest.
Volcanoes also make soil as the ash, pumice and lava break down. This mixed with
plant and animal remains makes very rich soil. In 1980, MSH erupted six more
time, usually blowing ash into the air and causing pumice to slide down the side
of the mountain. In June and August, the lava that came out from the top was
thick enough to finally form a new dome. This dome was destroyed only to be
formed again in October. After this, the eruptions only added to the size of the
dome making it larger. What came out of MSH The erupting volcano sent out
material and debris of all sizes. The term of all of this is tephra. the
material that was blown out of the volcano was classified by its size. 0.1
inches or less =Ash 0.1-2.5 inches = Lapillo or little stones 2.5 inches and
larger = Bombs and blocks Bombs are rocks that are soft when they are ejected
while blocks are solid. Both bombs and blocks can land miles away and fly at
speeds of 1250 miles per hour. The blocks destroy whatever they land on while
the bombs explode and burst into red hot liquid when they land. The earth has
many volcanoes, the majority of them circling the Pacific Ocean. These volcanoes
are known as the Ring of Fire. Scientists know that he volcanoes are in this
formation because of the movement of the earth's crust. There are over 400
active volcanoes in the world. They are found in weak places, or faults, in the
Earth's crust, where two of the Earth's plates meet. Volcanoes and earthquakes
occur in the same general area. Volcanoes seem to relieve some of the pressure
of the Earth's mantle, so the earthquakes near them are milder.
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