Story Published:
May 4, 2006 at 2:30 PM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 8:25 AM PST
MT. ST. HELENS - If the skies are clear as forecast, volcano watchers who turn
out for the reopening of the Johnston Ridge Observatory on Friday
will get a spectacular view of a hulking slab of rock that's
rapidly growing in Mount St. Helens' crater.
It's jutting up from one of seven lobes of fresh volcanic rock
that have been pushing their way through the surface of the crater
since October 2004.
The fin-shaped mass is about 300 feet tall and growing 4 feet to
5 feet a day, though it occasionally loses height from rockfalls
off its tip, said Dan Dzurisin, a geologist at the U.S. Geological
Survey.
It began growing last November, steadily moving west and pushing
rock and other debris out of its way as it goes.
Mount St. Helens has been quietly erupting since a flurry of
tiny earthquakes began in late September 2004. Scientists initially
mistook the quakes as rainwater seeping into the hot interior of
the older lava dome.
But it soon became clear that magma was on the move, confirmed
by the emergence of fire-red lava between the old lava dome and the
south crater rim a few weeks after the seismic activity began.
The volcano has continued pumping out lava ever since.
Eventually, scientists expect the volcano will rebuild its conical
peak that was obliterated in the May 18, 1980, eruption that killed
57 people.
The current growth of the new lava dome has been accompanied by
low seismicity rates, low emissions of steam and volcanic gases and
minor production of ash, the USGS said.
"Given the way things are going now, there's no hint of any
sort of catastrophic eruptions," USGS geologist Tom Pierson said.
"At any time, however, things can change."
Scientists flew a helicopter into the crater late last week to
adjust equipment and take photographs that will likely be used to
determine just how much the new lava dome has grown the last
several months.
Their latest measurements, taken in December, showed that the
new lava dome was about 96 million cubic yards in volume - enough
to fill a football field with a stack of rock 10½ miles high,
Pierson said.
Scientists know the new dome is now larger than the old dome, a
mass that's about 97 million cubic yards in volume that formed from
a series of eruptions from 1980-1986.
"The 1980 dome frankly does not look very impressive anymore,"
Dzurisin said. "It's starting to disappear."
The Johnston Ridge Observatory, which closes down every winter,
is the closest observatory to the 8,364-foot peak. It sits about
five miles north of the mountain and offers the closest views of
the volcano's horseshoe-shaped crater.
Johnston Ridge was named after David A. Johnston, a
volcanologist killed in the 1980 eruption.