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The latest news on Hurricane Ivan on its path through Grenada,Jamaica,The Cayman Islands,Cuba,The Yucatan Peninsula,The Florida Panhandle and Georgia
Thursday, September 30, 2004
Ivan is history but Mount St Helens Eruption is about to take center stage
A row of television trucks line a parking area near Johnston Ridge as Mount St. Helens towers behind Thursday morning, Sept. 30, 2004, at Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, Wash. A series of small earthquakes at the volcano over the past week has prompted scientists to predict an eruption could be imminent. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)
By GENE JOHNSONSEATTLE (AP) - The flurry of earthquakes at Mount St. Helens intensified further Thursday, and one scientist put the chance of a small eruption happening in the next few days at 70 per cent.Jeff Wynn, chief scientist at the U.S. Geologic Survey's Cascade Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, Wash., said tiny quakes were happening three or four times a minute. Larger quakes, with magnitudes of 3.0 to 3.3, were happening every three or four minutes, he said.New measurements show the 297-metre lava dome in the volcano's crater has moved six centimetres to the north since Monday, Wynn said."Imagine taking a 1,000-foot-high (300-metre) pile of rocks and moving it 2 1/2 inches (six centimetres). For a geologist, that's a lot of energy," Wynn said.Wynn estimated there was a 70 per cent chance the activity will result in an eruption.Scientists did not expect anything like the mountain's devastating eruption in 1980, which killed 57 people and coated towns 400 kilometres away with ash. On Wednesday, they warned that a small or moderate blast from the southwest Washington mountain could spew ash and rock as far as five kilometres from the 2,550-metre peak.Scientists planned to fly over the volcano again Thursday to test for gases that could indicate the presence of magma moving beneath the volcano.Few people live near the mountain, which is in a national forest about 160 kilometres south of Seattle. The closest structure is the Johnston Ridge Observatory, less than 10 kilometres from the crater.The heightened alert has drawn a throng of sightseers to observation areas. Dawn Smith, co-owner of Eco Park Resort west of the mountain, told the News Tribune of Tacoma, "It's just been crazy the past couple of days."A sign in front of her business reads: Here we go again.The Geological Survey raised the mountain's eruption advisory from Level 2 to Level 3 out of a possible 4 on Wednesday, prompting officials to begin notifying various state and federal agencies of a possible eruption.The USGS also has asked the National Weather Service to be ready to track an ash plume with its radar.In addition, scientists called off a plan to have two researchers study water rushing from the crater's north face for signs of magma.However, a plane was still able to fly over the crater Wednesday to collect gas samples. Negligible amounts of volcanic gas were found."An aircraft can move . . . out of the way fast," Wynn said. "We don't want anyone in there on foot."The USGS has been monitoring St. Helens closely since Sept. 23, when swarms of tiny earthquakes were first recorded. On Sunday, scientists issued a notice of volcanic unrest, closing the crater and upper flanks of the volcano to hikers and climbers.Scientists said they believe the seismic activity is being caused by pressure from a reservoir of molten rock a little more than 1.5 kilometres below the crater. That magma apparently rose from a depth of about 10 kilometres in 1998, but never reached the surface, Wynn said.The mountain's eruption on May 18, 1980, blasted away its top 400 metres, spawned mudflows that choked the Columbia River shipping channel, levelled hundreds of square kilometres of forest besides paralyzed towns and cities more than 400 kilometres to the east with volcanic ash.