Saturday, August 2, 2014

Mount Saint Helens Documentary: Review


Mount Saint Helens Documentary

                This documentary discussed the geological and volcanic conditions that lead to the 1980 eruption of Mt Saint Helens and what made this particular eruption unique. Mt Saint Helens is part of the cascade mountain range and its unique conical shape gave it the garnished nick name of the Mt Fuji of North America. In 1980 a series of earthquakes occurred in the area surrounding Mt Saint Helen. Knowing that volcanic activity can generate earthquakes as a result of magma forcing its way through the crust, groups of scientists and researchers flocked to Mt Saint Helens to study this new activity. Scientists set up to measure the amount of hydrogen sulfate being produced by the mountain under the assumption that as more magma moved into the mountain and pressures increased, that the volume of gas released would increase. This assumption would prove to be false as the volume of gas released remained relatively stable even though the tremors persisted.
 After a few months of observation, individuals and the public began to notice that the mountain no longer had its signature conical shape, but now had a deformity protruding from the mountains north side. A bulge began to form and data from measurements taken daily showed that the bulge was growing by about 5ft per day. Geologists and volcanologists hypothesized that migrating magma and gas pressure could be the cause of this deformation. On the morning of May 18th 1980 Mount Saint Helens erupted, surprising all of the researchers who had been studying the mountain. The researchers knew there was activity in the mountain but none of their data hinted that an eruption was imminent. The entire north side of the mountain became destabilized and collapsed during a 5.4 earthquake, with no earth to contain the pressure, magma and gas exploded out from the north side of Mt Saint Helens, triggering a lateral eruption, decimating hundreds of acres of forest. The eruption was so violent that the mountain changed its shape from an elegant conical tower to a rough horseshoe shaped mountain. Rotten rock was determined to have played a role in the collapse of the north face which lead to the devastating eruption. Rock becomes rotten when hot water passes through the rock, altering the chemistry of the sediment making it loose and crumbly. With such a large portion of the mountain made up of rotten rock, when that earthquake hit the crumbly and weakened bulge destabilized and collapsed in a massive landslide.
                Hot ash from the eruption melted the snow and ice at the top of nearby peaks, causing massive flows of water and sediment down from the mountain tops forming a lahar which blocked Spirit Lake from its river. As time went on the snow melt continually flowed into Spirit Lake causing the lake to rise to dangerous levels. Eventually Spirit Lake overflowed creating a massive lahar which washed down the mountain destroying thousands of woodlands. Knowledge of this put construction crews into action to create a relief system for Spirit Lake so as to let the lake drain if the water level got to high, in hopes of preventing any other lahars from forming.

An eruption similar to that of Mount Saint Helens occurred in 1995 on the island of Montserrat in the Phillipines. The volcano on this island also formed a distinctive bulge making the scientists wary and inciting an order to evacuate or relocate many of the islands citizens. Sure enough, seismic activity lead to the collapse of the bulge creating a landslide and another lateral eruption, just like that of Mt Saint Helens. The islands capital of Plymouth was destroyed and covered in 30ft of mud. Thankfully, knowledge obtained from the findings and experiences from the Mt Saint Helens eruption helped save thousands of lives on that island. 

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