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Mt. St. Helens

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Another View of the Bulge. April 27,1980. Steam Eruption Prior to ... The bulge and surrounding material slid away in a gigantic land and debris avalanche ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mt. St. Helens


1
Mt. St. Helens
  • 1980 Eruption
  • Before, During and After

2
Where is Mt. St. Helens
  • The Cascade Range is a volcanic chain stretching
    from Northern California to British Columbia
  • Mt. St. Helens is part of this range

3
Mt. St. Helens, the smallest of five major
volcanic peaks in Washington state had an
elevation of 9677 feet before the eruption of May
1980.
Mt. Adams (12,286) in the distance
4
First Evidence of Activity
  • Initial ice fractures on March 27, 1980
  • 3/28- First phreatic (steam) eruption
  • The vent 250 ft in diameter

5
March 29, 1980 Second Crater
  • Crater appeared on the NE side of the first
    crater
  • The new vent was 75ft. Wide and 30-60ft deep
  • 3/31 the two craters joined together

6
March 30, 1980 Ash Darkens Slopes
  • Ash came from rock pulverized by the
    explosively-expanding, high-temperature steam and
    other gases- No new rock produced
  • Mt. Rainier in the background

7
Steam Explosion -4/10/80
8
Bulge Forms on N-NE Flank
  • Bulge first detected on 4-23
  • End of April the bulging area was one mile long
    and 0.6 mile wide
  • Maximum uplift 320 feet
  • Some areas of uplift - 5 feet a day!

9
Another View of the Bulge April 27,1980
10
Steam Eruption Prior to 5-18-80
  • Typical phreatic (steam) eruption in early May
  • Eruptions reached 13,000 feet in elevation
  • This activity was followed a two week quiet period

11
On may 18th 1980 at 832
  • Geologist David Johnston was taking
    measurements on a ridge just 5 miles NW of the
    summit when he radioed Vancouver! Vancouver!
    This is it! Moments later he was vaporized by
    the cloud of hot gas, ash, rock, ice and trees
    that hit him

12
For more than nine hours, the eruption continued.
People that escaped had to drive 80mph on old
logging roads to escape
13
May 18th 1980
  • 832 AM PDT a magnitude 5.1 shook Mt. St. Helens
  • The bulge and surrounding material slid away in
    a gigantic landslide and debris avalanche

14
Computer Version of Landslide
  • The initial earthquake and eruption triggered one
    of the largest landslides in recorded history.
  • The slide traveled 110-155mph
  • Hit a 1150ft high ridge about 6 miles north.
    Some of the slide spilled over the ridge
  • Most of the slide moved 13 miles down the North
    Fork of the Toutle River filling its valley up to
    600 ft deep

15
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16
The initial May 18th Eruption View From Less
Than Three Miles
  • The cloud rose to more than 12 miles in 10
    minutes
  • The cloud generated its own lightning
  • Ash rained down initially in an area that
    extended 25-30 miles to the north and east
  • Later, ash covered parts of eleven states

From an airplane that barely made it back!
17
  • For over nine hours, a vigorous plume of ash
    erupted reaching 12-15 miles above sea level
  • The plume moved eastward at an average speed of
    60 mph with ash reaching Idaho by noon
  • Many cities had to use snowplows to remove the
    several inches of ash accumulation

18
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19
Eleven States Had Ash Fallout
20
View from the NE on June 19, 1980
This area was completely forested prior
to the May 18, 1980 eruption
21
  • Helicopters were deployed to try and save
    survivors. Few were found
  • Some people were found with their arms calmly
    folded or a camera held to their eye. The hot
    gasses killed them as they stood. It is believed
    that some people and vehicles were instantly
    incinerated

The total volume of ash as approximately .26
cubic mile or enough ash to cover a football
field to a depth of 150 miles
22
The initial blast flattened over four billion
board feet - Enough to build over 150,000 homes.
23
Nearly 135 miles of river channels surrounding
the volcano were affected by the lahars.
Note the mud line on the trees and the person
in the picture
24
The remains of Spirit Lake, once surrounded by
lush forest
Mt. Rainier, 14,410ft in the distance
25
  • After the May 18,1980 eruption, Mt.St. Helens
    elevation was only 8364 feet and the volcano had
    a one-mile wide horseshoe-shaped crater

Craters were formed when water and hot ash came
together making large steam explosions
26
Reid Blackburn, a National Geographic
Photographers car
Ried Blackburn along with Volcanologist David A.
Johnston were never found
27
The U shaped basin formed by the landslide and
5/18/80 eruption
June 4th 1980 - Mudflows are visible in the
picture
28
  • Mt. St. Helens erupted often between 1980 and
    1986
  • An explosive eruption on 3/19/82 sent pumice and
    ash 9 miles into the air and resulted in a lahar

29
Pyroclastic flow from August 7,1980 eruption
  • During the 5/18/80 eruption, at least 17 separate
    pyroclastic flows descended the flanks of the
    mountain
  • Pyroclastic flows typically move at speeds of
    over 60 mph and reach temperatures of over 800
    degrees

30
October 24, 1980 a new dome started growing.
This October dome was 112ft high and 985 feet
wide making it taller than a nine-story building
and wider than the length of three football fields
31
Mt. St. Helens soon after the 5/18/80 eruption
from Johnstons Ridge
Taken September 10, 1980
32
USGS Scientist Explore Pumice Blocks from a
Pyroclastc flow
October 17, 1980
33
Geologists install a seismic station near the
dome.
An increase in seismicity is often the first
precursor to an approaching eruption
34
5/19/82- Plume from Harry's Ridge
Plumes of steam, gas, and ash often occurred at
Mt. St. Helens in the early 1980s. On clear
days, they could be seen from Portland Oregon, 50
miles to the south
35
Harry's Ridge Was Named After Harry Truman of
Spirit Lake
36
Measuring magnetic field in crater 6/18/84
Geologist measured the strength of the magnetic
field surrounding the dome. The strength of the
field increased as the dome cooled and magnetic
minerals formed. During the eruptions, the
strength usually changed rapidly as magma heated
and deformed the dome
37
USGS scientists survey the dome 5/26-84
38
April 18, 1988 USGS Deformation Monitoring on the
Dome
39
Mt. St. Helens, Sept. 1994
40
Aerial View of Mt. St. Helens 2002
41
Mt.St Helens night shot of Dome 10-22-86
42
Mt.St Helens Spirit Lake before The May1980
Eruption
43
Mt.St. Helens Lake Reflection- After the Eruption
Picture taken May 19, 1982
44
2005 Saw An Increase In Activity
Picture Taken May 7, 2005
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