Join us on the Solstice to "Visualize Sustainable World Prosperty Now" read more

logo http://theunicornshoppe.com/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=489
 
Today's Top Story
Today's most-read story is:

Last Night's Celestial Triangle Was Harbinger for World Prosperity Meditation

Main Menu

Amazon.com

Advertisement
http://theunicornshoppe.com

Lunar Info

Relevant Ad Links

Our Newsletter

The Magickal Web Newsletter

Absolutely the best Magickal newsletter going - delivered to your inbox each week!

We value your privacy. We will not give your email address to anyone.


Security Monitor
Running - Screening - Strict
Spambot blocker has denied 1151 access attempts in the last 7 days

We Are Your Holistic News Connection

Science: Revisiting Mount St. Helens

Posted on Monday, February 25, 2008 - 04:00 PM

A Michigan Technological University researcher has produced a new seismic model that could help geophysicists figure out what is going on inside Mount St. Helens, North America's most active volcano.

Revisiting Mount St. Helens

Volcanoes are notoriously hard to study. All the action takes place deep inside, at enormous temperatures. So geophysicists make models, using what they know to develop theories about what they don’t know.

Article Continues After Illustration
Mt. St. Helens
The crater created during the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, with the new lava dome. The volcano in the background is Mount Adams, due east of Mount St. Helens. The picture shows the glacier (crevassed and covered with ash), with the older dome that was built from 1980-86 in the lower left.

Research led by Gregory P. Waite, an assistant professor of geophysics at Michigan Technological University, has produced a new seismic model for figuring out what’s going on inside Mount St. Helens, North America’s most active volcano. Waite hopes his research into the causes of the earthquakes that accompany the eruption of a volcano will help scientists better assess the hazard of a violent explosion at Mount St. Helens and similar volcanoes.

Waite and co-authors Bernard A. Chouet and Phillip B. Dawson published their findings on February 19, 2008, in the Journal of Geophysical Research. Waite’s research was conducted during a Mendenhall Postdoctoral Fellowship with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).

Volcanoes don’t always erupt suddenly and violently. The most recent eruption of Mount St Helens, for example, began in October 2004 and is still going on. It’s what Waite and other volcanologists call a passive eruption, with thick and sticky lava squeezing slowly out of the ground like toothpaste from a tube.

When a volcano such as Mount St Helens erupts, it can cause a series of shallow, repetitive earthquakes at intervals so regular that they’ve been called “drumbeat earthquakes.” Until now, scientists generally believed that these earthquakes were caused by the jerky movements of a solid plug of molten rock traveling up from the volcano’s core, a process known as the stick-slip model.

Modeling of seismic data collected by Waite and colleagues dispute that explanation. “The regularity and similarity of the shallow earthquakes seem consistent with a stick-slip model,” said Waite. Broadband measurements indicated that the energy is concentrated in a short bandwidth—between .5 and 2 Hz—and the earthquakes have nearly identical wave forms. Interestingly, the first motions observed at all of the seismic stations were the same.

“But this is not typical of a stick-slip event,” Waite said. “Rather, it suggests a source with a net volume change, such as a resonating fluid-filled crack.”

The fluid in the crack most likely is steam, derived from the magma and combined with water vaporized by the heat of the molten rock. A continuous supply of heat and fluid keeps the crack pressurized and the “drumbeats” beating, Waite explained.

“The pressurized crack in our model is filled with steam that could conceivably drive a small explosive eruption if the pattern (of earthquakes) we observe is disturbed,” he noted. Mount St. Helens erupted violently in 1980, losing nearly 1,000 feet of its cone-shaped top.

“The cause of Mount St. Helens earthquakes during the 2004-2008 eruption has been a matter of great debate,” said Seth Moran, the principal USGS seismologist monitoring the current eruption. “Greg collected a fantastic dataset with temporary seismometers and used highly sophisticated modeling techniques to produce a robust and intriguing model for the process responsible for those earthquakes. His model is somewhat different from the hypothesis that many other Mount St. Helens researchers have been using,” the seismologist went on to say, “and we are adjusting our understanding of the mechanics underlying the current eruption to incorporate his results.”

Waite’s co-author, Chouet, who also works for the USGS, proposed a similar seismological model for volcanoes in Hawaii, where the lava is much more fluid and flows more easily. This is the first time the model has been applied to volcanoes like Mount St. Helens, with slow-flowing, sticky lava.



©Copyright 2008 by AlternativeApproaches.com





Printer Friendly Page Printer Friendly Page Send this story to someone

Comments

Add a new Comment





Last Month's 10 Most Read Articles on Alternative Approaches

1. The Gathering of the Tribes on a Warm San Franciscan Night (Feature Article by Christine Hall)

2. Taj Mahal Turning Yellow Due to Pollution (Article: Category: Environment)

3. Free Love Spells Offered Online (Article: Category: Media)

4. Penetration (Art by Marat Zakharin)

5. The Children of Sexual Abuse (Feature Article by Charlotte Shaw)

6. The Mermaids of Atlantis (Feature Article by Adrienne Dumas)

7. Iran Inforces Islamic Dress Code (Article: Category: Politics)

8. Acupuncture Continuing Education Courses Available Online (Article: Category: Health/Natural)

9. Impulse (Art by Marat Zakharin)

10. The Prophecies of South America (Feature Article by Robert A. Nelson)

Search Amazon

Advertisements

Commercial Messages

Advertise Here


Recommend Our Site
Do a friend a favor...
Recommend Our Site
Click Here

http://naturalworldwellness.com/

News of interest to the magickal community as it happens.