America's Most
Dangerous VOLCANO.
| Title Annotation: |
Mt. Rainier, Washington |
| Author: |
McClintock, Jack |
| Geographic Code: |
1USA |
| Date: |
Nov 27, 2000 |
| Words: |
1642 |
| Publication: |
Science World |
| ISSN: |
1041-1410 |
For thousands who live near Mount Rainier, the mountain is more than a
beautiful sight. It's an explosion waiting to happen.
It's an ordinary day in Orting, Washington, with neighborhood kids
shooting hoops in driveways and tearing around on their bikes. But
looming high above their homes is the 4,392 meter (14,410 foot)-high,
snowcapped Mount Rainier--the most dangerous volcano in the United
States. When it erupts--and scientists say one day it will--blistering
avalanches of hot rock, lava, and ash will sweep down the volcano.
Worse, walls of mud hundreds of meters deep, called lahars--filled with
melted ice, boulders, and whole forests of uprooted trees--will gush
down river valleys. Like concrete cascading down a cement truck chute,
lahars could even entomb the streets of Orting. "We do volcano
drills in school every year and climb on buses in case we need to get
out fast," says Orting High School student Josh Garber, 14.
Brianna Backus, 14, adds, "I do think there's a chance Rainier could
blow, but we live far enough away to escape in time. I'm not afraid for
myself--I'm more afraid for my dog and my fish."
Rainier is one of many potentially explosive volcanoes in the Cascades,
a mountain range extending from Northern California to British
Columbia, Canada. Seven Cascades volcanoes have erupted in the last 200
years, including Washington's Mount St. Helens in 1980. It spewed steam
and ash at more than 321 kilometers (200 miles) per hour, flooding
valleys below with debris from the largest landslide in human history.
Many towns have been built near the 165 potentially active volcanoes
that bubble away in the continental U.S., Alaska, and Hawaii. And near
Mt. Rainier at least 100,000 people live on the solidified mudflows of
past eruptions, with millions more in nearby Seattle and Tacoma.
"There's nothing we can do to stop a volcano," says U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS) volcanologist (volcano scientist) Margaret Mangen.
WAITING TO EXPLODE
Why is Rainier so dangerous? Like most volcanoes, it sits on the edge
of two constantly shifting tectonic plates, sections of Earth's
outermost layer, or crust. When tectonic plates collide, one plate
may be squeezed down into Earth's mantle (layer below the crust), where
rock melts into magma (molten rock); pressure thrusts magma toward the
surface. There it becomes trapped in underground chambers like boiling
oatmeal. If pressure becomes too great, the volcano erupts.
Disaster could come to Rainier in several ways: it may flow, blow, or
both. If Rainier blows, like Mt. St. Helens did, it will erupt
with violent force, shooting tons of gas, ash, and
superheated volcanic rock or lava into the stratosphere, 50 km (31
mi) above Earth's surface. If it flows, a less explosive but still
deadly eruption will trigger a pyroclastic flow--an avalanche of
burning ash (as hot as 704 [degrees] C or 1,300 [degrees] F) that
speeds downhill at 129 km (80 mi) per hour, incinerating everything in
its wake.
Fortunately, Rainier won't erupt without warning. Before it explodes,
the volcano will swell, spout steam and gas, and rumble noisily for
months. Such signs help volcanologists predict eruptions and warn area
residents in time to evacuate.
DICEY SCIENCE
But predicting volcanic eruptions remains a dicey science. The Mt.
St. Helens explosion came sooner and proved far more powerful than
scientists predicted. The eruption killed 57 people and became a
wake-up call to scientists at USGS monitoring stations near potentially
dangerous volcanoes.
Geologists quickly mapped rock deposits from previous eruptions to
chart their frequency. To monitor Rainier, volcanologists deployed six
seismometers, instruments that detect even small quakes often preceding
an eruption. They also installed instruments near high-risk volcanoes:
tiltmeters, which detect ground movements, and Global Positioning
System (GPS) satellite receivers to pinpoint ground-movement
location. And researchers analyzed the chemistry and temperature of gas
emissions from volcanic hot springs and gas vents called fumaroles. As
Japanese geochemist Sadao Matsuo has said, "Volcanic gas is a telegram
from Earth's interior."
If Rainier erupts, lava or pyroclastic flow shouldn't reach far beyond
the boundaries of Mount Rainier National Park, explains Willie Scott,
head scientist at the Cascades Volcano Observatory in Vancouver,
Washington. But a lahar flow, triggered by earthquakes could be
far more lethal to towns and cities. When Rainier erupted 5,600 years
ago, an ocean of lahar buried a 259 square km (100 square mi) area of
the White and Puyallup River valleys in sludge.
Monitoring data may help predict when and how Rainier might explode
next, Scott thinks. "But my concern is that by the time a flowing lahar
is detected, it could be as little as 45 minutes from the nearest town.
So warning has to be automatic and reliable." Mt. Rainier and Mt. St.
Helens are the only two U.S. volcanoes permanently monitored for
lahars. Scientists use geophones--microphones placed underground in
river valleys, which "hear" approaching mudslides and trip an alarm
system. Compact solar-powered sensors transmit radio signals to
emergency centers, which would spread an alarm via a computerized
warning system.
Many people live in the shadow of this beautiful, unstable mountain. "I
think people are overexaggerating this stuff," Orting High School's
Sean McIlraith, 16, says. "I know if it does happen, it could be
catastrophic. But I think people are just making too big of a deal." In
the meantime, scientists' best hope is to educate and protect residents
as best they can from a fatal landslide or explosion from America's
most dangerous volcano.
Adapted and reprinted with permission of Discover magazine [C] 1999.
In Close Range of a Killer
In the past 4,000 years, four eruptions have burried Mount Rainier's
river valleys in deadly lava and mud-slides. Its next eruption could
destroy areas 50 or more miles away.
Mount St. Helens: NEW LIFE FROM THE
ASHES
On May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens in Washington State exploded. Part of
the mountain top blew off, and in the immediate area around the volcano
no life survived. Since then, ecologists (scientists who study
relationships between organisms) have used the
devastated landscape to investigate how natural environments, or
ecosystems, recover from such destruction.
What they learned has turned their theories upside down. "We thought we
knew what was going to happen," says Terry Franklin, a forest ecologist
at the University of Washington. "We were clearly wrong." Scientists
expected life would renew itself in orderly fashion and return to its
original state: plants like mosses and lichens would revive
first--they can withstand harsh conditions. These species would pave
the way for wildflowers and herbs, then deciduous plants (losing their
leaves in winter); finally conifers, or evergreen trees, would grow
back.
Instead, renewal amid the lifeless landscape proved more random.
Pockets of survivors, like moles, gophers, and ants survived
underground. Saplings and shrubs still shrouded in snow weathered the
blast that toppled tall trees. Wildflower roots were swept away
with the avalanche--then sprouted in entirely new places.
Life around Mt. St. Helens flourishes once again, but the
"neighborhood" has changed dramatically, with many new species and
different numbers of previous residents.
HANDS-ON SCIENCE
Create a Crater
During a volcanic eruption, hot gases trapped beneath rock burst from
the volcano's center. The sudden release of gaseous pressure causes the
mountain-like structure to collapse, and leaves a massive crater, or
caldera, in its center. Want to create your own volcanic crater? Try
this activity.
YOU NEED:
box * balloon * plastic tubing * clamp * newspaper * tape * 2.27
kilogram (5 pound) bag of flour
TO DO:
1. Line the box with newspaper, then punch a hole (large enough to fit
the tubing) through the center of the box and the newspaper.
2. Pass the tubing through the hole and stretch the opening of the
balloon over the tubing. Secure the balloon to the tubing with tape.
3. Blow through the tubing to inflate the balloon at least 5
centimeters (2 inches) in diameter; to keep air pressure in the
balloon, clamp off the plastic tubing.
4. Bury the balloon beneath a cone-shaped mound of flour.
5. Open the clamp and let the balloon deflate.
CONCLUSION:
What happens to the flour? Why? What force holds up the mountain of
flour!
America's Most Dangerous Volcano * Earth Science: Volcano
Cross-Curricular Connection
History: Have students research a historic volcanic eruption and report
its effects on people and the environment.
Did You Know?
* We think of volcanoes as cone-shaped mountains, but any hole through
which lava reaches Earth's surface is a volcano. Most are found beneath
the sea.
* On May 8, 1902, one of the worst volcanic disasters of the 20th
century struck the Caribbean island of Martinique. Mt. Pelee erupted,
killing 29,000 residents.
* Volcano-monitoring technologies save lives. In spring 1991,
scientists from the U.S. and Philippines monitoring Mt. Pinatubo
determined an eruption was imminent. It exploded on June 15--but most
local residents had been evacuated.
National Science Education Standards
Grades 5-8: structure of Earth's systems * Earth's history * natural
hazards * science and technology in society * populations, resources,
and environments
Grades 9-12: energy in Earth's system * geochemical cycles * science
and technology in local, national and global challenges * natural and
human-induced hazards
Resources
"Under the Volcano," Discover, November, 1999, p. 82 "as Mt. St. Helens
Recovers, Old Wisdom Crumbles," The New York Times, May 16, 2000,
p. F5
Volcano and Earthquake, by Susanna Van Rose, (Eyewitness Books, Dorling
Kindersley, 2000)
America's Most Dangerous Volcano
1. Cascade
2. 13
3. volcanologist
4. tectonic
5. mantle
America's Most Dangerous Volcano
Directions: Fill in the blanks.
1. Mt. Rainier belongs to the West Coast's -- mountain range.
2. Rainier is one of -- potentially active volcanoes in the mountain
chain.
3. A -- is a scientist who studies volcanoes.
4. Most volcanoes sit on the edge of two constantly shifting -- plates.
5. When these plates collide, one is usually pushed down through
Earth's crust into the --.
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2000 Scholastic, Inc.
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2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson
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