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Augustine volcano erupts quietly.


Augustine volcano Augustine Volcano is a stratovolcano on Augustine Island in southwestern Cook Inlet in the Kenai Peninsula Borough of southcentral coastal Alaska, 280 kilometres (180 miles) southwest of Anchorage.  erupts quietly

Avalanches, glowing lava and 10,000-foot-high trails of ash and steam signaled on Aug. 20 that the Augustine Island Augustine Island (ô`gəstēn, –tĭn; ôgŭs`tĭn), unihabited volcanic island, S Alaska, in Kamishak Bay at mouth of Cook Inlet. The active Augustine (or St.  volcano in Alaska entered a new phase of activity, the third outburst since it erupted last March 27 (SN:5/17/86, p.309). Located at the entrance to Cook Inlet Cook Inlet

Inlet, Gulf of Alaska in the northern Pacific Ocean. Bounded by the Kenai Peninsula on the east, it extends northeast for 220 mi (350 km), narrowing from 80 to 9 mi (129 to 14 km). Anchorage is situated near its head.
, 175 miles southwest of Anchorage, the 4,025-foot volcano is also sending dense flows of ash and steam down its slopes and building a new dome of molten rock to replace the one it partially blew off in March.

This activity is characteristic of volcanoes having magma rich in silica. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Charlotte Rowe, a graduate student at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks who is conducting research on the volcano, the magma flowing up through the volcano is thick and slow-moving, unlike the runny run·ny  
adj. run·ni·er, run·ni·est
Inclined to run or flow: runny icing; a runny nose.


runny
Adjective

[-nier, -niest
 magma of the silica-poor Hawaiian volcanoes. "It oozes out like toothpaste coming out of a tube,' Rowe says. When it reaches the surface, the magma tends to cool and plug up the opening, forming a dome.

Silica-rich magma also holds a higher proportion of gases, which bubble out of the upwelling up·well·ing  
n.
1. The act or an instance of rising up from or as if from a lower source: an upwelling of emotion.

2.
 molten rock. If a dome seals the opening of the volcano, the pressure builds up inside until the gas explodes in a new eruption.

The March explosion, says Rowe, was mainly the release of gases. The magma is continuing to ooze OOZE - Object oriented extension of Z. "Object Orientation in Z", S. Stepney et al eds, Springer 1992.  upward, cracking open the remains of the old dome and daily sending three to four avalanches of debris down the slopes. Rowe says the absence of significant earthquakes at this stage indicates that the magma now flowing is part of the eruption that began violently in March. "If there were new magma from deeper levels . . . we would expect to see seismic activity similar to that just prior to the March eruption,' she says. While the recent activity could continue for months or years, the likelihood of another explosion soon is "probably less than half.' Rowe notes, however, that sparse information about the volcano makes predictions difficult.

Photo: In a calmer continuation of its March eruption (left), Alaska's Augustine volcano spews ash and steam (right).
COPYRIGHT 1986 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1986, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Alaska
Author:Kleist, Trina
Publication:Science News
Date:Sep 6, 1986
Words:355
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