Story Published:
May 29, 2006 at 7:42 PM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 7:26 AM PST
VANCOUVER, WASH. - Mount St. Helens shot a steam and ash
plume at least 16,000 feet into the air Monday after a large
rockfall from the lava dome in the volcano's crater, scientists
said.
Pilots reported the plume rose between 16,000 and 20,000 feet in
the air, scientists at the Cascades Volcano Observatory said.
The rockfall coincided with a magnitude 3.1 earthquake shortly
after 9 a.m. Monday at the mountain, scientists said. Such events
are expected during growth of the lava dome, they said.
"There is no evidence of an explosion associated with this
event," the observatory said in a statement.
Clouds obscured the crater at the time.
"We don't know how much steam and how much ash," Cynthia
Gardner, scientist in charge at the observatory, told The
Columbian. "These are very short-lived events."
Lava has continued to push into the crater - most recently
forming a sheer rock fin - since the 8,364-foot mountain reawakened
with a drumfire of low-level seismic activity in September 2004.
The crater was formed by the volcano's deadly May 18, 1980,
eruption that killed 57 people and blasted about 1,300 feet off the
then-9,677-foot peak.