
Mount St. Helens, May 17, 1980.
The
1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens
, a stratovolcano located in Washington
state, in the United States, was a major volcanic eruption. The eruption (which
was a VEI = 5 event) was
the only significant one to occur in the contiguous 48 U.S. states since the 1915 eruption of California
's Lassen
Peak
.
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 Mount St. Helens'
north slope. An earthquake at 8:32:17 a.m. on May 18, 1980 caused
the entire weakened north face to slide away, suddenly exposing the
partly molten, gas- and
steam-rich
rock in the volcano to lower pressure.
The rock
responded by exploding a hot mix of lava and
pulverized older rock toward Spirit Lake
so quickly that it overtook the avalanching north
face.
A
volcanic ash column rose into the
atmosphere and deposited ash in
11 U.S. states. 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 fifty miles (eighty
kilometers) to the south. Less severe outbursts continued into the
next day only to be followed by other large but not as destructive
eruptions later in 1980.
Fifty seven people (including innkeeper
Harry R. Truman and geologist
David A. Johnston) and thousands of animals were
killed. Hundreds of square miles were reduced to wasteland, causing
over a billion
U.S. dollars in damage
($2.74 billion in 2007 dollars), 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.
The area
was later preserved, as it was, in the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic
Monument
.
Buildup to the eruption
Mt. St. Helens remained dormant from its last period of activity in
the 1840s and 1850s until March 1980. Several small earthquakes
beginning as early as March 15, 1980, indicated that magma may have
been moving below the volcano. Then on March 18 at 3:45 p.m.
Pacific Standard Time (all
times will be in PST), a shallow
Richter magnitude 4.2
earthquake (the initial reading was 4.1),
centered below the volcano's north flank, signaled the
volcano's violent return from 123 years of
hibernation. A gradually building
earthquake swarm saturated area
seismographs and started to climax at about noon
on March 25, reaching peak levels in the next two days, including
an earthquake registering 4.5 on the Richter scale. A total of 174
shocks of magnitude 2.6 or greater were recorded during those
two days.

USGS photo showing a pre-avalanche
eruption on April 10.
Shocks of magnitude 3.2 or greater occurred at a slightly
increasing rate during April and May with five earthquakes of
magnitude 4 or above per day in early April, and
8 per day the week before May 18. Initially there was no
direct sign of eruption, but small earthquake-induced
avalanches of snow and ice were reported from
aerial observations.
At 12:36 p.m. on March 27, at least one but possibly two
nearly simultaneous
phreatic
eruptions (exploding
groundwater-derived
steam)
ejected and smashed rock from within the old summit
crater, excavating a new crater
250 feet (76 m) wide and sending an ash column about
7,000 feet (2,100 m) into the air. By this date, a long,
east-trending fracture system had also developed across the summit
area. This was followed by more earthquake swarms and a series of
steam explosions that sent ash 10,000 to 11,000 feet (3,000 to
3,400 m) above their vent.
Most of this ash fell within 3 to
12 miles (5 to 20 km) from its vent, but some was carried
as far as 150 miles (240 km) south to Bend, Oregon
, and 285 miles (460 km) east to Spokane,
Washington
.
A second, new crater and a blue flame was observed on March 29. The
flame was visibly emitted from both craters and was probably
created by burning gases.
Static
electricity generated from ash clouds rolling down the volcano
sent out
lightning bolts that were up to
two miles (3 km) long. Ninety-three separate outbursts were
reported on March 30, and increasingly strong
harmonic tremors were first detected on
April 1, alarming geologists and prompting Governor
Dixy Lee Ray to declare a state of emergency on
April 3.
By April 7 the combined crater was 1,700 feet (520 m)
long, 1,200 feet (365 m) wide and 500 feet
(150 m) deep. A
USGS team determined in
the last week of April that a diameter section of St. Helens' north
face was displaced out at least 270 feet (82 m). For the
rest of April and early May this bulge grew 5 to 6 ft (1.5 to
1.8 m) per day, and by mid-May it extended more than
400 feet (120 m) north. As the bulge moved northward, the
summit area behind it progressively sank, forming a complex,
down-dropped block called a
graben.
Geologists announced on April 30 that sliding of the bulge area was
the greatest immediate danger and that such a
landslide might spark an eruption. These changes
in the volcano's shape were related to the overall deformation that
increased the volume of the volcano by 0.03 cubic miles
(0.1 km³) by mid-May. This volume increase presumably
corresponded to the volume of magma that pushed into the volcano
and deformed its surface. Because the intruded magma remained below
ground and was not directly visible, it was called a
cryptodome, in contrast to a true
lava dome exposed at the surface.
On May 7, eruptions similar to those in March and April resumed,
and over the next days the bulge approached its maximum size. All
activity had been confined to the 350-year-old summit dome and did
not involve any new
magma. A total of about
10,000 earthquakes were recorded prior to the May 18 event, with
most concentrated in a small zone less than 1.6 miles
(2.6 km) directly below the bulge. Visible eruptions ceased on
May 16, reducing public interest and consequently the number of
spectators in the area. Mounting public pressure then forced
officials to allow 50 carloads of property owners to enter the
danger zone on May 17 to gather whatever property they could carry.
Another trip was scheduled for 10 a.m. the next morning. Since
that was Sunday, more than 300 loggers would not be working in the
area. By the time of the climactic eruption,
dacite magma intruding into the volcano had forced
the north flank outward nearly 500 feet (150 m) and
heated the volcano's
groundwater system,
causing many steam-driven explosions (phreatic eruptions).
North face slides away

Sequence of events on May 18.
At 7 a.m. on May 18, USGS
volcanologist David A. Johnston, who had
Saturday night duty at an observation post about 6 miles
(10 km) north of the volcano, radioed in the results of some
laser-beam measurements he had made moments
earlier. Mount St. Helens' activity that day did not show any
change from the pattern of the preceding month. The rate of bulge
movement,
sulfur dioxide emission,
and ground temperature readings did not reveal any unusual changes
that might have indicated a catastrophic eruption.

North Fork Toutle River valley filled
with landslide deposits.
Suddenly, at 8:32 a.m., a magnitude 5.1 earthquake
centred directly below the north slope triggered that part of the
volcano to slide, approximately 7–20 seconds (about
10 seconds seems most reasonable) after the shock. One of the
largest landslides in recorded history, the slide travelled at 110
to 155 miles per hour (175 to 250 km/h) and moved across
Spirit Lake's west arm; part of it hit a high ridge about
6 miles (9.5 km) north.
Some of the slide spilled over the ridge,
but most of it moved 13 miles (21 km) down the North Fork
Toutle
River
, filling its valley up to 600 feet
(180 m) deep with avalanche debris. An area of about
24 square miles (62 km²) was covered, and the total
volume of the deposit was about 0.7 cubic miles
(2.9 km³).
Most of St. Helens' former north side became a rubble deposit
17 miles (27 km) long, averaging 150 feet
(46 m) thick; the slide was thickest at one mile (1.6 km)
below Spirit Lake and thinnest at its western margin. All the water
in Spirit Lake was temporarily displaced by the landslide, sending
high waves crashing into a ridge north of the lake, adding
295 feet (90 m) of new avalanche debris above the old
lakebed, and raising its surface level by about 200 feet
(60 m). As the water moved back into its
basin, it pulled with it thousands of trees
felled by a super-heated wall of volcanic gas and searing ash and
rock that overtook the landslide seconds before.
Pyroclastic flows
Initial lateral blast

Computer graphic showing the May 18
landslide (green) being overtaken by the initial pyroclastic flow
(red).
The landslide exposed the
dacite magma in St.
Helens' neck to much lower pressure causing the gas-charged,
partially molten rock and high-pressure steam above it to explode a
few seconds after the slide started.
Explosions burst through the trailing part of the
landslide, blasting rock debris northward. The resulting blast
laterally directed the
pyroclastic
flow of very hot volcanic gases, ash, and
pumice formed from new lava, while pulverized old
rock hugged the ground, initially moving at 220 mph
(350 km/h) but quickly accelerating to 670 mph
(1080 km/h) (it may have briefly passed the
speed of sound).
Pyroclastic flow material passed up the moving avalanche and spread
outward, devastating a fan-shaped area 23 miles (37 km)
across and 19 miles (30 km) long. In all, about
230 square miles (600 km²) of forest were knocked down,
and extreme heat killed trees miles beyond the blow-down zone. At
its vent the lateral blast probably did not last longer than about
30 seconds, but the northward radiating and expanding blast
cloud continued for about another minute.
Superheated flow material flashed water in
Spirit Lake and North Fork Toutle River to steam, creating a
larger, secondary explosion that was heard as far away as British
Columbia
, Montana
, Idaho
, and
Northern California.
Yet many
areas closer to the eruption (Portland, Oregon
, for example) did not hear the blast. This
so-called "quiet zone" extended radially a few tens of miles from
the volcano and was created by the complex response of the
eruption's
sound waves to differences in
temperature and air motion of the atmospheric layers and, to a
lesser extent, local
topography.
Later studies indicated that one-third of the 0.045 cubic
miles (188,000,000 m³) of material in the flow was new lava,
and the rest was fragmented, older rock.
Lateral blast result
Everyone in the quiet zone could see the huge ash cloud that was
sent skyward from St. Helens' northern foot. The near-supersonic
lateral blast, loaded with volcanic debris, caused devastation as
far as 19 miles (30 km) from the volcano. The area
affected by the blast can be subdivided into three roughly
concentric zones:

Photographer Reid Blackburn's car
after the eruption.
- Direct blast zone, the innermost zone, averaged about
8 miles (13 km) in radius, an area in which virtually
everything, natural or artificial, was obliterated or carried away.
For this reason, this zone also has been called the "tree-removal
zone." The flow of the material carried by the blast was not
deflected by topographic features in this zone.
- Channelized blast zone, an intermediate zone, extended
out to distances as far as 19 miles (30 km) from the
volcano, an area in which the flow flattened everything in its path
and was channeled to some extent by topography. In this zone, the
force and direction of the blast are strikingly demonstrated by the
parallel alignment of toppled large trees, broken off at the base
of the trunk as if they were blades of grass mown by a scythe. This zone was also known as the "tree-down
zone."
- Seared zone, also called the "standing dead" zone, the
outermost fringe of the impacted area, a zone in which trees
remained standing but were singed brown by the hot gases of the blast.
By the time this pyroclastic flow hit its first human victims, it
was still as hot as 360 °C (680 °F) and filled with suffocating gas
and flying angular material. Most of the 57 people known to have
died in that day's eruption succumbed to
asphyxiation while several died from burns.
Lodge owner
Harry R. Truman was buried under hundreds of
feet of avalanche material. Volcanologist
David A. Johnston
was one of those killed, as was Reid
Blackburn, a National Geographic
photographer.
Later flows
Subsequent outpourings of pyroclastic material from the breach left
by the landslide consisted mainly of new magmatic debris rather
than fragments of preexisting volcanic rocks. The resulting
deposits formed a fan-like pattern of overlapping sheets, tongues,
and lobes. At least 17 separate pyroclastic flows occurred during
the May 18 eruption, and their aggregate volume was about 0.05
cubic miles (208,000,000 m³).
The flow deposits were still at about 300 °C to 420 °C (570 °F to
785 °F) two weeks after they erupted. Secondary steam-blast
eruptions fed by this heat created pits on the northern margin of
the pyroclastic-flow deposits, at the south shore of Spirit Lake,
and along the upper part of the North Fork Toutle River. These
steam-blast explosions continued sporadically for weeks or months
after the emplacement of pyroclastic flows, and at least one
occurred a year later, on May 16, 1981.
Ash column grows

Ash cloud from Mt St Helens as
captured by GOES-3 at 1545 UTC.
As the avalanche and initial pyroclastic flow were still advancing,
a huge ash column grew to a height of 12 miles (19 km)
above the expanding crater in less than 10 minutes and spread
tephra into the
stratosphere for 10 straight hours. Near the
volcano, the swirling ash particles in the atmosphere generated
lightning, which in turn started many
forest fires. During this time, parts of
the
mushroom-shaped ash-cloud column
collapsed, sending additional pyroclastic flows speeding down St.
Helens' flanks. Later, slower flows came directly from the new
north-facing crater and consisted of glowing pumice bombs and very
hot pumiceous ash. Some of these hot flows covered ice or water
which flashed to steam, creating craters up to 65 feet
(20 m) in diameter and sending ash as much as 6,500 feet
(1980 m) into the air.
Strong high-
altitude wind carried much of
this material east-northeasterly from the volcano at an average
speed of about 60 mph (100 km/h).
By 9:45 a.m. it
had reached Yakima,
Washington
, 90 miles (145 km) away, and by
11:45 a.m. it was over Spokane, Washington
. A total of 4 to 5 inches (100 to
130 mm) of ash fell on Yakima, and areas as far east as
Spokane were plunged into darkness by noon where visibility was
reduced to 10 feet (3 m) and half an inch (13 mm) of
ash fell.
Continuing east, St. Helens' ash fell in the
western part of Yellowstone National Park
by 10:15 p.m. and was seen on the ground in
Denver,
Colorado
, the next day. In time ash fall from
this eruption was reported as far away as Minnesota
and Oklahoma
, and some of the ash drifted around the globe
within about 2 weeks.
During the nine hours of vigorous eruptive activity, about
540 million tons of ash fell over an area of more than
22,000 square miles (60,000 km²). The total volume of the
ash before its compaction by
rainfall was about
0.3 cubic miles (1.3 km³). The volume of the uncompacted
ash is equivalent to about 0.05 mile³ (208,000,000 m³) of
solid rock, or about 7% of the amount of material that slid off in
the debris avalanche. By around 5:30 p.m. on May 18, the
vertical ash column declined in stature, but less severe outbursts
continued through the next several days.
Mudslides flow downstream
The hot, exploding material also broke apart and melted nearly all
of the mountain's
glaciers along with most
of the overlying snow. As in many previous St. Helens' eruptions,
this created huge
lahars (volcanic
mudflows) and muddy floods that affected three of
the four stream drainage systems on the mountain, and which started
to move as early as 8:50 a.m. Lahars travelled as fast as
90 mph (145 km/h) while still high on the volcano but
progressively slowed to about 3 mph (5 km/h) on the
flatter and wider parts of rivers. Mudflows from the southern and
eastern flanks had the consistency of wet concrete as they raced
down Muddy River, Pine Creek, and Smith Creek to their confluence
at the
Lewis River. Bridges
were taken out at the mouth of Pine Creek and the head of Swift
Reservoir, which rose 2.6 feet (0.8 m) by noon to
accommodate the nearly 18 million cubic yards
(13 million m³) of additional water, mud, and
debris.
Glacier and snow melt mixed with tephra on the volcano's northeast
slope to create much larger lahars.
These mudflows traveled down the north
and south forks of the Toutle River and joined at the confluence of
the Toutle forks and the Cowlitz River
near Castle Rock,
Washington
, at 1:00 p.m. Ninety minutes after the
eruption, the first mudflow had moved 27 river miles
(43 km) upstream where observers at
Weyerhaeuser's Camp Baker saw a high wall of
muddy water and debris pass. Near the confluence of the Toutle's
north and south forks at Silver Lake, a record
flood stage of 23.5 feet (7.2 m) was
recorded.
A large but slower-moving mudflow with a mortar-like consistency
was mobilized in early afternoon at the head of the Toutle River
north fork. By 2:30 p.m. the massive mudflow had destroyed
Camp Baker, and in the following hours seven bridges were carried
away. Part of the flow backed up for 2.5 miles (4 km)
soon after entering the Cowlitz River, but most continued
downstream. After traveling 17 miles (27 km) further, an
estimated 3.9 million cubic yards
(3.0 million m³) of material were injected into the
Columbia River, reducing the river's
depth by 25 feet (7.6 m) for a four-mile (6 km)
stretch.
The resulting 13-foot (4 m) river depth
temporarily closed the busy channel to ocean-going freighters,
costing Portland,
Oregon
an estimated five million US
dollars. Ultimately more than 65 million cubic
yards (50 million m³) of sediment were dumped along the
lower Cowlitz and Columbia Rivers.
Aftermath
Direct results

Map showing 1980 eruption
deposits.
The May 18, 1980, event was the most deadly and economically
destructive volcanic eruption in the
history of the United States.
Fifty-seven people were killed and 200 homes, 27 bridges,
15 miles (24 km) of railways and 185 miles
(300 km) of highway were destroyed. U.S. President
Jimmy Carter surveyed the damage and said it
looked more desolate than a
moonscape. A film
crew was dropped by helicopter on St. Helens on May 23 to document
the destruction. Their
compasses, however,
spun in circles and they quickly became lost. A second eruption
occurred the next day (see below), but the crew survived and were
rescued two days after that. The eruption ejected more than
1
cubic mile (4 km³) of
material. A quarter of that volume was fresh lava in the form of
ash, pumice, and
volcanic bombs while
the rest was fragmented, older
rock.
The removal of the north side of the mountain (13% of the cone's
volume) reduced St. Helens' height by about 1,313 feet
(400 m) and left a crater 1 to 2 miles (2 to 3 km)
wide and 2,100 feet (640 m) deep with its north end open
in a huge breach.
More than 4 billion
board feet
(14.6 km³) of
timber was damaged or
destroyed, mainly by the lateral blast. At least 25% of the
destroyed timber was salvaged after September 1980. Downwind of the
volcano, in areas of thick ash accumulation, many agricultural
crops, such as wheat, apples, potatoes, and
alfalfa, were destroyed. As many as 1,500
elk and 5,000
deer were killed, and
an estimated 12 million
Chinook and
Coho salmon
fingerlings died when their hatcheries were destroyed. Another
estimated 40,000 young
salmon were lost when
they swam through
turbine blades of
hydroelectric generators when
reservoir levels were lowered along the Lewis River to
accommodate possible mudflows and
flood
waters.
In all, Mt. St. Helens released 24 megatons of thermal energy, 7 of
which as a direct result of the blast.
This is equivalent to
1,600 times the size of the atomic bomb dropped on
Hiroshima
.
Digging out

Map of ash distribution over the
United States.
The ash fall created some temporary but major problems with
transportation,
sewage disposal, and
water
treatment systems. Visibility was greatly decreased during the
ash fall, closing many highways and roads.
Interstate 90 from Seattle
to Spokane
was closed for a week and a half. Air travel
was disrupted for a few days to 2 weeks as several airports in
eastern Washington shut down because of ash accumulation and poor
visibility. Over a thousand commercial flights were cancelled
following airport closures. Fine-grained, gritty ash caused
substantial problems for
internal-combustion engines and
other mechanical and electrical equipment. The ash contaminated oil
systems and clogged air filters, and scratched moving surfaces.
Fine ash caused
short circuits in
electrical transformers, which in turn caused
power blackouts.
Removing and disposing of the ash was a monumental task for some
eastern Washington communities. State and federal agencies
estimated that over 2.4 million cubic yards
(1.8 million m³) of ash — equivalent to about
900,000 tons in weight — were removed from highways and
airports in Washington. The ash removal cost $2.2 million and took
10 weeks in Yakima. The need to remove ash quickly from transport
routes and civil works dictated the selection of some disposal
sites. Some cities used old quarries and existing sanitary
landfills; others created dump sites wherever
expedient. To minimize wind reworking of ash dumps, the surfaces of
some disposal sites were covered with topsoil and seeded with
grass. In Portland, the mayor eventually threatened businesses with
fines if they failed to remove the ash from their parking
lots.
Cost

One of the 200 houses destroyed by the
eruption.
Early estimates of the cost of the eruption ranged from
US$2–3
billion. A refined estimate of
$1.1 billion ($2.74 billion in 2007 dollars) was determined in
a study by the
International Trade
Commission at the request of the
United States Congress. A
supplemental appropriation of $951 million for disaster relief
was voted by Congress, of which the largest share went to the
Small Business
Administration,
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and
the
Federal
Emergency Management Agency.
There were also indirect and intangible costs of the eruption.
Unemployment in the immediate region of
Mount St. Helens rose tenfold in the weeks immediately following
the eruption, and then returned to nearly normal levels once timber
salvaging and ash-cleanup operations were underway. Only a small
percentage of residents left the region because of lost jobs owing
to the eruption. Several months after May 18, a few residents
reported suffering
stress and
emotional problems, even though they had
coped successfully during the crisis. Counties in the region
requested funding for mental health programs to assist such
people.
Initial public reaction to the May 18 eruption dealt a nearly
crippling blow to
tourism, an important
industry in Washington.
Not only was tourism down in the Mount St.
Helens–Gifford Pinchot National
Forest
area, but conventions, meetings, and social
gatherings also were cancelled or postponed at cities and resorts
elsewhere in Washington and neighboring Oregon
not affected
by the eruption. The adverse effect on tourism and
conventioneering, however, proved only temporary. Mount St. Helens,
perhaps because of its reawakening, has regained its appeal for
tourists. The
United States
Forest Service and the State of Washington opened visitor
centers and provided access for people to view the volcano's
devastation.
Later eruptions
St. Helens produced five more explosive eruptions between May and
October 1980. Through early 1990, a total of at least 21 periods of
eruptive activity had occurred. The volcano remains active, with
smaller, dome-building eruptions continuing into 2008.

Eruption on July 22, 1980.
An eruption occurred on May 25, 1980 at 2:30 a.m. that sent an
ash column 9 miles (14 km) into the atmosphere. The
eruption was preceded by a sudden increase in earthquake activity
and occurred during a rain storm. Erratic wind from the storm
carried ash from the eruption to the south and west, lightly
dusting large parts of western Washington and Oregon. Pyroclastic
flows exited the northern breach and covered avalanche debris,
lahars and other pyroclastic flows deposited by the May 18
eruption.
At 7:05 p.m. on June 12, a plume of ash billowed
2.5 miles (4 km) above the volcano. At 9:09 p.m. a
much stronger explosion sent an ash column about 10 miles
(16 km) skyward. This event caused the Portland area,
previously spared by wind direction, to be thinly coated with ash
in the middle of the annual Rose Festival. A
dacite dome then oozed into existence on the crater
floor, growing to a height of 200 feet (60 m) and a width
of 1,200 feet (370 m) within a week.
A series of large explosions on July 22 broke more than a month of
relative quiet. The July eruptive episode was preceded by several
days of measurable expansion of the summit area, heightened
earthquake activity, and changed emission rates of
sulfur dioxide and
carbon dioxide. The first hit at
5:14 p.m. as an ash column shot 10 miles (16 km) and
was followed by a faster blast at 6:25 p.m. that pushed the
ash column above its previous maximum height in just
7.5 minutes. The final explosion started at 7:01 p.m. and
continued for over two hours. When the relatively small amount of
ash settled over eastern Washington, the dome built in June was
gone.

The growing third dome on October 24,
1980.
Seismic activity and gas emission steadily increased in early
August, and on August 7 at 4:26 p.m., an ash cloud slowly
expanded 8 miles (13 km) into the sky. Small pyroclastic flows
were sent through the northern breach and weaker outpouring of ash
rose from the crater. This continued until 10:32 p.m. when a
second large blast sent ash high into the air. A second dacite dome
filled this vent a few days later.
Two months of repose were ended by an eruption lasting from October
16 to October 18. This event obliterated the second dome, sent ash
10 miles (16 km) in the air and created small, red-hot
pyroclastic flows. A third dome began to
form within 30 minutes after the final explosion on October
18, and within a few days, it was about 900 feet (270 m)
wide and 130 feet (40 m) high.
In spite of the dome
growth next to it, a new
glacier
formed rapidly inside the crater.
All of the post-1980 eruptions were quiet dome-building events,
beginning with the December 27, 1980, to January 3, 1981, episode.
By 1987 the third dome had grown to be more than 3,000 feet
(900 m) wide and 800 feet (240 m) high.
Further eruptions occurred over a few months during 1989–1991, and
the mountain became active again in late 2004 building a new dome.
This activity lasted until January 2008.
Summary table
Eruption Summary
May 18, 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens |
| Volcano |
Elevation of Summit: |
Before eruption:
After eruption:
Total removed: |
| Crater dimensions: |
East-West:
North-South:
Depth: |
| Crater floor elevation: |
|
|
| Eruption |
Date: |
May 18, 1980 |
| Time of initial blast: |
8:32 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7) |
| Eruption trigger: |
A magnitude 5.1 earthquake about beneath the volcano |
|
Landslide /
Debris Avalanche |
Area covered: |
|
Volume:
(uncompacted deposits) |
0.67 mi³ (2.8 km³) |
| Depth of deposit: |
Buried North Fork Toutle River to average depth of with a
maximum depth of |
| Velocity: |
to |
|
| Lateral Blast |
Area covered: |
; reached northwest of the crater |
Volume of deposit:
(uncompacted deposits) |
0.046 mi³ (0.19 km³) |
| Depth of deposit: |
From about at volcano to less than at blast edge |
| Velocity: |
At least |
| Temperature: |
As high as |
| Energy release: |
24 megatons thermal energy (7 by blast, rest through release of
heat) |
| Trees blown down: |
4 billion board feet (9.4 million m³)
of timber (enough to build about 300,000 two-bedroom homes) |
| Human fatalities: |
57 |
|
| Lahars |
Velocity: |
About to and over on steep flanks of volcano |
| Damaged: |
27 bridges, nearly 200 homes. Blast and lahars destroyed more
than of highways and roads and of railways. |
| Effects on Cowlitz River: |
Reduced carrying capacity at flood stage at Castle Rock from
76,000 ft³/s (2,150 m³/s) to less than 15,000 ft³/s
(225 m³/s) |
| Effects on Columbia River: |
Reduced channel depth from to ; stranded 31 ships in upstream
ports |
|
Eruption Column
And Cloud |
Height: |
Reached about in less than 15 minutes |
| Downwind extent: |
Spread across U.S. in 3 days; circled Earth in 15 days |
Volume of ash:
(based on uncompacted deposits) |
0.26 mi³ (1 km³) |
| Ash fall area: |
Detectable amounts of ash covered |
| Ash fall depth: |
at downwind (ash and pumice)
at downwind
at downwind |
|
| Pyroclastic Flows |
Area covered: |
; reached as far as north of crater |
Volume and depth:
(volume based on uncompacted deposits) |
0.029 mi³ (0.12 km³); multiple flows to thick;
cumulative depth of deposits reached in places |
| Velocity: |
Estimated at to |
| Temperature: |
At least |
|
| Other |
Wildlife: |
The Washington State Department of Game estimated nearly 7,000
big game animals (deer, elk, and bear) perished as well as all
birds and most small mammals. Many burrowing rodents, frogs,
salamanders, and crawfish, managed to survive because they were
below ground level or water surface when the disaster struck. |
| Fisheries: |
The Washington Department of Fisheries estimated that 12
million Chinook and Coho salmon fingerlings were killed when
hatcheries were destroyed. Another estimated 40,000 young salmon
were lost when forced to swim through turbine blades of
hydroelectric generators as reservoir levels along the Lewis River
were kept low to accommodate possible mudflows and flooding. |
| Brantley and Myers, 1997, Mount St. Helens -- From the 1980 Eruption to
1996: USGS Fact Sheet 070–97, accessed 2007-06-05; and Tilling,
Topinka, and Swanson, 1990, Eruption of Mount St. Helens - Past, Present, and
Future: USGS General Interest Publication, accessed
2007-06-05. |
| Table compiled by Lyn Topinka, USGS/CVO, 1997 |
See also
Notes
References
- Harris, Stephen L. (1988). Fire Mountains of the West: The
Cascade and Mono Lake Volcanoes. Missoula: Mountain Press
Publishing Company, Missoula. ISBN 0-87842-220-X
- (adapted public domain text)
- Topinka, Lyn. Mount St. Helens: A General Slide Set, Cascades
Volcano Observatory, U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved on
2007-05-19
External links