07:53 AM PST on Thursday, March 10, 2005
VANCOUVER, Wash. - Scientists are taking a look at the crater of Mount
St. Helens to see what happened in Tuesday's steam burst.
The U.S. Geological Survey's Jon Major told a news conference Wednesday
the lava dome is "remarkably intact." He said there was no lava flow, no
mudflow and there is no hazard beyond the mountain itself.
"These are exactly the kinds of events we've said all along could happen
without warning during this period of dome-building that's been going on
for the past four months. These are the kinds of events you can expect.
We just can't necessarily predict when they're going to happen," said
Major.
A fine dusting was reported as far as away 125 miles to the
east-northeast in southern Grant County by the time ashfall stopped late
Tuesday night, the National Weather Service reported. An ashfall
advisory for some areas east of the Cascade Range was canceled at
midnight.
"It looks like it's gone back to roughly the same type of (earthquake)
signal that we were seeing before." University of Washington
seismologist Steve Malone told The Seattle Times late Tuesday.
Scientists said it was the most powerful blast from St. Helens since the
latest round of volcanic activity began last fall.
The 30-minute outpouring began with practically no warning around 5:25
p.m. Tuesday, about an hour after a 2.0 magnitude quake on the east side
of the 8,364-foot volcano, the most active in the 48 contiguous states,
said Bill Steele, coordinator of the Pacific Northwest Seismograph
Network at the university in Seattle.
Terry McClain Terry McClain from Puyallup took this picture on a San Francisco to Seattle flight.
In the preceding hours there had been a subtle increase in quake
activity, Malone said.
"We've had this relatively placid dome-building eruption going on, but
we've been saying all along that could change at any time," Carolyn
Driedger, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Geological Survey's Cascades
Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, told The Times.
"It is the kind of eruption that we have been talking about the
possibility of all along," Driedger told the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Seismologists said the blast explosion destroyed three sensors in the
crater but other instruments around the rim of the crater remained
intact.
Roger Cloutier, a senior weather service forecaster, said very fine ash
was reported in much of Yakima and Kittitas counties, including Yakima,
Ellensburg and Toppenish.
"It's a very light dusting," Cloutier said. "You probably could only see
it on cars." Aviation officials said commercial flights at
Seattle-Tacoma and Portland, Ore., international airports were not
affected.
Scientists said the explosion did not appear to indicate a higher risk
of a more dangerous blast, noting that high levels of the kind of gases
that often signal an eruption had not been detected in recent flights
over the crater.
"We don't expect another explosion," said Peggy Johnson, a seismologist
at the lab.
Steele said the latest blast may have been triggered by partial collapse
of a lava dome which began growing in the crater beside an older dome in
October.
"Until we get a better view in the crater, we won't know," Steele said.
SkyKing A view of the Mount St. Helens crater from SkyKing on March 9, 2005.
The newer dome had been crumbling slightly in the past week, releasing
small puffs of ash and steam, Malone said.
Geologists have said there is little chance of anything like the massive
explosion that removed the top 1,243 feet of the mountain on May 18,
1980, killing 57 people and covering the region with gritty ash.
Even so, Scott Miller and William Nicoll, both 19, college roommates
visiting the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, were stunned.
"The first thing that went through my mind was, 'Is this 1980 again?"'
Miller told The Times.
Miller snapped a cou0ple of photographs over Nicoll's protests, after
which they leaped into their car and drove west, yelling at other
motorists to turn back until they had gone about a mile and felt safe
again.
"It was a pretty big adrenaline rush," Nicoll said.
St. Helens, about 50 miles north-northeast of Vancouver, has been
spewing ash and steam since last fall.
Starting Sept. 23, swarms of earthquakes peaked above magnitude 3 as
magma broke through solid rock as it rose through the mountain, reaching
the surface on Oct. 11. Since then the emerging magma has resumed
dome-building after a 19-year hiatus.






