1980 eruption of
Mount St Helens.
On
May 18, 1980, a major volcanic eruption occurred at
Mount St. Helens, a volcano located in the state of
Washington, United States. The eruption (a
VEI 5 event) was the only significant volcanic eruption to occur in the contiguous 48
U.S. states since the
1915 eruption of
Lassen Peak in
California.[1] The eruption was preceded by a two-month series of earthquakes and steam-venting episodes, caused by an injection of magma at shallow depth below the volcano that created a huge bulge and a fracture system on the mountain's north slope.
An earthquake at 8:32:17 a.m.
PDT (
UTC−7) on Sunday, May 18, 1980, caused the entire weakened north face to slide away, creating the largest landslide ever recorded. This suddenly exposed the partly molten gas- and steam-rich rock in the volcano to lower pressures. The rock responded by exploding a hot mix of lava and pulverized older rock toward
Spirit Lake so fast that it overtook the avalanching north face.
An eruption column rose 80,
000 feet (24 km; 15 mi) into the atmosphere and deposited ash in 11 U.S. states.[2] At the same time, snow, ice and several entire glaciers on the volcano melted, forming a series of large lahars (volcanic mudslides) that reached as far as the
Columbia River, nearly 50 miles (80 km) to the southwest.
Less severe outbursts continued into the next day, only to be followed by other large, but not as destructive, eruptions later that year.
Approximately fifty-seven people were killed directly, including innkeeper
Harry R. Truman, photographer
Reid Blackburn and geologist
David A. Johnston.[3]
Hundreds of square miles were reduced to wasteland, causing over a billion
U.S. dollars in damage ($2.89 billion in
2015 dollars[4]), thousands of game animals were killed, and Mount St. Helens was left with a crater on its north side. At the time of the eruption, the summit of the volcano was owned by the
Burlington Northern Railroad, but afterward the land passed to the
United States Forest Service.[5] The area was later preserved, as it was, in the Mount St. Helens
National Volcanic
Monument.
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- published: 18 May 2016
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