Story Published:
Oct 5, 2004 at 6:26 AM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 12:35 AM PST
MT. ST. HELENS - Mount St.
Helens exhaled a spectacular roiling cloud of steam and ash
Tuesday, sprinkling grit on a small town some 25 miles away.
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 to the
northeast.
For days, scientists have been warning that the volcano could
blow at any moment with enough force to endanger lives and
property. But geologists said Tuesday a more likely scenario was
weeks or months of smaller-scale venting, with the possibility lava
could enlarge the dome within the mountain's gaping crater.
"There's not necessarily going to be a big one," said Jake
Lowenstern, a U.S. Geological Survey volcanologist.
Scientists have said all along there was little 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
students with asthma inside Tuesday after getting a light dusting
of ash.
Officials of sparsely populated Skamania County were concerned
that the ash might harm hunters in the area for elk season.
Officials at the Coldwater Ridge Visitors Center, 8½ 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."
Scientists said Tuesday's steam burst opened two small new vents
in the crater's floor, and that the floor continued to lift up, a
sign that magma was still building beneath the volcano. In the last
several days, the lava dome within the crater has swelled by about
150 feet.
Since Sept. 23, thousands of tiny earthquakes have shaken the
mountain and several steam eruptions have occurred, the most
seismic activity at the peak since the months following the 1980
blast.
Earthquakes trailed off after Tuesday's burst, dropping in both
magnitude and frequency, said Bill Steele, spokesman for the
University of Washington seismology lab in Seattle.
"We don't really know what it means at this point as far as a
prognosis," Steele said. "It could mean the plug (in the
volcano's magma channel) is real up there near the surface right
now - that it's not resisting anymore. We're watching very
closely."
For More Information:
St. Helens Info -- vulcan.wr.usgs.gov.
Live Web Camera Of Mt. St. Helens -- www.fs.fed.us
UW Real-Time Seismology Graphs Of Mt. St. Helens -- www.pnsn.org
What To Do In Case Of Ash Fall -- vulcan.wr.usgs.gov