Mount St. Helens Lets Off Some Steam
jdray writes "The cube farm is all a twitter right now, as Mt. St. Helens is spewing out a steam plume, and you can see if from our building. The cam for the volcano seems to be down, but we just saw a news helicopter from KATU, one of our local news stations, headed that direction. They should have some content up shortly." Other readers suggest: KOIN, KOIN webcams, Kiro TV, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, or CNN.
It sure looks like a cloud was framed strategically behind the moutain to make the "steam" look like more than it was. I see some dark wisps, and then a big white plume that seems to start right at the top of the crater as if it were actually behind it.
Here is some cool video (Windows media, but VLC played it fine):
Mexico's 'Fire Volcano' Erupts, No Evacuations Yet
KABLOOEY!
no
When the last one hit, things like pantyhose were used to keep ash from destroying their engines.
I live a couple hours south of Portland and we got only a light dusting after the first eruption. My wife lived further north and was cleaning ash off of cars for days.
Supposedly this one may throw rock and ash up to 3 miles away. The Forest Service camera is 5 miles off, and the 1980 explosion threw ask over 250 miles.
I haven't been up there but did hike up Lassen Peak in 2000. Much of that area is still bare from the eruptions that occurred around 1915.
The clearance system sounds logical. It is not. It is completely arbitrary. -- John Bolton
You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
I was fortunate to be within sixty miles of this explosion today, and I can say that it looked incredible in person.
I have a relative that was sitting at the dining table eating breakfast and looking out his window right at the volcano as it erupted in 1980. Now that would've been something to see.
The past may have had extreme natural events similarly, but were they so "focused" like in the last 3 months?
Maybe the earth had to reboot itself due to some Y2K issue?
Ring of fire activity is up all around the ring. From Japan to Mexico to California, there is a lot of seismic and volcanic activity still going on. St. Helens is just a symptom of something else. I am betting something big happens in the next 3 months. Either an inactive volcano blows, or there's a big EQ in the ring, but something is going to happen. 6.2 in Mexico, 6.0 in California, 7.2 in Japan, St. Helens burps, small quake activity in Alaska and the cascades is up, and Hawaii is looking at Mauna Loa going very active. All of this within the last month, and all of it unusial. I doubt this burp from St' Helens is going to be the total end result.
"Curiosity killed the cat, but for a while I was a suspect."- Steven Wright
I'd go for the snowboot and shovel markets if I was there, I think. That and selling the ash to those living too far away to be blessed by it's falling in their yard.
As for me, I thought it was so cool that I had a small bag of Mt St Helens ash I purchased with a photo of the eruption. I'm not sure if I've ever shared that little nugget of info with her.
I probably would have never known about this if I hadn't read about it here on Slashdot. I need to look outside more often since Mount St. Helens is in viewable range of my window.