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Published byShon Walter Pearson Modified over 9 years ago
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Outline Hazards Mt. St. Helens Case Study Precursors
Pompeii Case Study
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Volcanic Hazards and Mitigation
Figure 7-1
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1/2 billion people live within 60 miles of active volcanoes
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Hazards Lava flows Pyroclastic flows Ash and Pumice
Lahars: Mud flows from volcano Poisonous gases
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Lava Flows
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Pyroclastic ash plume: Interferes with airplane flight
(causes engine failure)
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Redoubt Volcano, Alaska
April 1990
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Pyroclastic flow: When plume cools, it falls to earth, creating a high-speed, hot, gaseous cloud of death
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Pyroclastic flow: Will the hills protect the town?
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Pyroclastic Flows and Surges
Pyroclastic flows can travel over surface of water Figure 7-10
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Suspended Ash
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3 months after eruption
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Ash clogs lungs and air filters
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Volcanic Mudflows Ash + water = flowing wet concrete Triggers:
eruption of volcano covered in ice or snow heavy rain Figure 7-13
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Volcanic Mudflows Icy to boiling temperatures (hot mudflow called lahar) Mudflows from Mount Rainier have buried valleys where many communities now sit Figure 7-17
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Poisonous Gases Pressure keeps gas dissolved in magma
At surface, gases exsolve More escaping gas: impending eruption Gas in atmosphere forms aerosols volcanic smog, “vog” Figure 7-19
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Poisonous Gases Carbon dioxide in high concentrations is colorless, odorless, denser than air (hugs ground) and deadly 1986 Cameroon: magmatic carbon dioxide bubbled out of Lake Nyos Killed more than 1700 people, 3000 cattle Figure 7-20
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Poisonous Gases Carbon dioxide from Long Valley Caldera in eastern California has killed huge areas of trees Other volcanic gases include sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, chlorine compounds, fluorine Figure 7-21
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