Mount St. Helens Exhales Ash and Steam
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2004
MOUNT ST. HELENS NATIONAL VOLCANIC MONUMENT, Wash. Mount St.
Helens exhaled a spectacular roiling cloud of steam and ash
Tuesday, sprinkling grit on a small town about 25 miles from the
volcano.
The volcano has been venting steam and small amounts of ash
daily since Friday, but Tuesday morning's burst was the largest,
producing a billowing, dark gray cloud that rose thousands of feet
above the 8,364-foot-high rim of the crater and streamed miles to
the northeast.
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For days, scientists have been warning that the volcano could
blow at any moment with enough force to endanger lives and
property. After the latest burst of steam, it was not immediately
whether the strong eruption was still to come or whether the
pressure inside the volcano had eased.
Either way, scientists said there was hardly any chance of a
repeat of the cataclysmic 1980 eruption that killed 57 people and
coated much of the Northwest with ash.
The town of Randle, with a population of about 2,000, kept
pupils with asthma inside after getting a light dusting of ash.
Officials of sparsely populated Skamania County also were
concerned about that the ash might harm hunters in the area for elk
season.
Officials at the Coldwater Ridge Visitors Center, 8.5 miles north
of the mountain, told the several dozen people at the center's
parking lot not to drive into the ash if the plume reached them.
However, the cloud trailed away to the east.
Ken Marshall drove up from Valley Springs, Calif., hoping to see
an eruption.
"It's almost like clockwork," he said. "It blows in the
morning, and then there are earthquakes and rockfall all the rest of
the day."
Earthquakes below magnitude 3 continued into Tuesday morning,
and the lava dome within the crater kept swelling. Geologists said
molten rock, or magma, beneath the crater was apparently pushing it
upward.
Scientists had been expecting steam bursts as superheated rock
came into contact with runoff from melting snow and ice. Runoff
from a melting glacier formed a bubbling pond about 120 feet across
in the crater, U.S. Geological Survey spokeswoman Catherine Puckett
said Tuesday.
The Johnston Ridge Observatory, about five miles from the
crater, has been closed since the weekend, and most air traffic has
been prohibited below 13,000 feet and within five miles of the
volcano.
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