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VOLCANO TAME, FAR FROM DORMANT : MOUNT ST. HELENS COULD BE THREAT AGAIN.


Byline: Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

It occasionally belches Belches may refer to:
  • Peter Belches, early explorer of Western Australia;
  • Point Belches, a geographic feature in the Swan River.
  • Belches, physical reactions to buildup of gas in the digestive tract.
 a cloud of superheated steam steam heated to a temperature higher than the boiling point corresponding to its pressure. It can not exist in contact with water, nor contain water, and resembles a perfect gas; - called also surcharged steam, anhydrous steam, and steam gas.

See also: Steam
, but for the most part, Mount St. Helens has been very quiet.

In fact, October marked the 10th anniversary since the mountain's last eruption.

``At the moment, there is nothing to suggest any imminent eruptive activity at Mount St. Helens,'' said Ed Wolfe, a volcanologist at the Cascades Volcano Observatory A volcano observatory is an institution that conducts research and monitoring of a volcano. Each observatory provides continuous and periodic monitoring of the seismicity, other geophysical changes, ground movements, volcanic gas chemistry, and hydrologic conditions and activity  in Vancouver.

It has been so tame that fellow volcanic peak Mount Rainier A format for providing platform interoperability and native OS support for CD-RW and DVD+RW disks. The "MRW" or "CD-MRW" format enables files to be saved to RW disks as if they were hard disks (from any Save dialog or dragged and dropped).  - because of its potential to send giant mudflows cascading down populated valleys - has moved up to No. 1 on the volcano hazard list.

Mount St. Helens' most destructive blowup occurred May 18, 1980, when 57 people were killed and 230 square miles of forest were leveled. The pressure of the eruption sent a cloud of ash circling the globe and caused more than $1 billion in damage and cleanup costs.

``A big blast and landslide are unlikely, and there is less ice and snow available (on the mountain's flanks) to generate lahars (mudflows) as there were in 1980. So for the time being it is not as threatening,'' Wolfe said.

But like many naturally occurring phenomena, the volcano's lack of activity is nothing to be complacent about.

The volcano is continuing to grow, slowly heading for a future eruption.

Slow-moving lava is continuously making its way to the surface through a pipelike conduit. There it cools, contracts and hardens, clogging the volcano's outlets and making it likely that the next eruption will be more violent than the eruptions that have occurred since the 1980 blast, Wolfe said.

``The next batch of magma that reached the surface will have to break its way through,'' causing tremendous pyroclastic flows of gas and pumice pumice (pŭm`ĭs), volcanic glass formed by the solidification of lava that is permeated with gas bubbles. Usually found at the surface of a lava flow, it is colorless or light gray and has the general appearance of a rock froth.  as well as towers of sky-bound ash, he said.

The mountain's lava dome In volcanology, a lava dome or plug dome is a roughly circular mound-shaped protrusion resulting from the slow eruption of felsic lava (usually rhyolite and/or dacite) from a volcano. , now 1,000 feet high, would be blown apart.

Also, a new danger in the form of almost 70 million cubic yards of snow and ice is taking shape.

The mixture has accumulated in the shaded back portion of Mount St. Helens' crater in the last 10 years - enough trapped water to fill nearby Castle Lake nearly twice.

Depending on the type of eruption and time of year, a blowup could melt the snow and ice and cause a large mudflow mudflow: see landslide.
mudflow

Flow of water that contains large amounts of suspended particles and silt. Mudflows usually occur on steep slopes where vegetation is too sparse to prevent rapid erosion, but they can also occur on gentle slopes under
 to cascade down the Toutle Valley, Wolfe said.

Although it doesn't appear now that the mudflow would flood cities on the Cowlitz, the growing size of the snow and ice field is posing a definite threat, said Tom Pierson of the U.S. Geological Survey.

The field is expected to double in size in the next 15 years, Pierson said.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Nov 3, 1996
Words:439
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