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Nation's Newest Glacier Growing in Mount St. Helens' Crater
Associated Press ^ | Oct 12, 2004 | Peggy Andersen

Posted on 10/12/2004 1:17:57 AM PDT by Jet Jaguar

MOUNT ST. HELENS, Wash. (AP) - While earthquakes, steam and magma are getting all the attention on Mount St. Helens these days, the volcano's most unique feature could be the icy epitome of slow motion that has sprouted on its flanks in the last two decades: its glacier.

The 1980 eruption that blew the top off Mount St. Helens also destroyed its 13 glaciers, but by 1982, the crater floor had cooled enough to allow snow to begin to stick. Now, even as the volcano stirs to life, the nation's newest glacier is growing between the lava dome and the crater's south wall.

At a time when most of the nation's glaciers are receding, this one has advanced as much as 135 feet annually, flowing downhill toward the blasted north edge of the crater like a muffler draped around the neck of the lava dome.

"It's the only growing glacier in the contiguous United States," said U.S. Geological Survey hydrologist Steve Schilling at the Cascades Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, Wash.

There are two reasons the 8,364-foot volcano is a good incubator for the fledging glacier: the crater's walls have protected the snow, preventing it from melting year to year, and rockfall from the crater walls and dome provides insulation, sometimes several feet thick. Even volcanic ash can serve as insulation for a glacier.

"A cross section of the glacier would look like a layer cake," said Schilling, who has been granted permits for his Mount St. Helens research.

The glacier is 3,500 feet wide between the south side of the lava dome and the crater wall. Some parts are 600 feet deep, although the average is 325.

Scientists are calculating now how much water that translates to - having the rare advantage of pre-glacier maps of the crater floor at 3,000 feet.

At this stage, there's not much concern the heat of the volcano will melt a significant amount of the glacier. A lake has formed in one of two explosive pits in the glacier and is now bubbling with carbon dioxide gas from the magma.

"It would have to break up an enormous amount of material," Schilling said.

There are few comparable situations around the world but scientists are considering all of them, he added. Volcanos and glaciers coexist in Iceland and in Alaska.

Only one other volcano - in Katmai, Alaska - has hosted glaciers that have grown as quickly as this one, he said.

Recent activity at Mount St. Helens is lifting part of the glacier. Schilling said some layers are nearly vertical right now at a site on the southeast side of the dome where underground pressures are lifting ice and stone almost as high as the 1,000-foot-tall lava mound.

Researchers were trying to evaluate the glacier's potential hazards before Mount St. Helens rumbled back to life Sept. 23 with thousands of small earthquakes, followed by intermittent venting of steam clouds sometimes mixed with ash. The south side of the lava dome has been rising for the past week, indicating molten rock within the volcano is moving upward.

The still-unnamed glacier contains about 120 million cubic meters of snow, ice and rock, Schilling said.

---

On the Net:

www.glaciercaves.com

U.S. Geological Survey regional site: http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Cascades/CurrentActivity/

AP-ES-10-12-04 0356EDT


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Washington
KEYWORDS: mtsthelens

1 posted on 10/12/2004 1:17:57 AM PDT by Jet Jaguar
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: Nathaniel Fischer

And its just as likely the glacier is Flowing down hill on the meltwater caused by heat rising thru the rock. This is what makes glaciers "gallop" here in Alaska.

http://www.gi.alaska.edu/ScienceForum/ASF12/1210.html


3 posted on 10/12/2004 1:29:00 AM PDT by konaice
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To: Jet Jaguar

Al Gore will deny that this glacier exists. However, he will claim that the hot lava is caused by Bush's economic policies.


4 posted on 10/12/2004 1:32:41 AM PDT by Sociopathocracy
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To: Jet Jaguar
Mount St.Helens (Official Alert Thread)


10-12-04
<,a href="http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1242932/posts">Magma reaches Mount St. Helens' surface
Looks like Fire and Magma at Mount St. Helens!
Nation's Newest Glacier Growing in Mount St. Helens' Crater

10-11-04
Mount St. Helens Activity Again
Mount St. Helens Gets Hotter, Lets Off More Steam

10-10-04
Mount St. Helens Shoots Out More Steam


10-09-04
"Loaf" rises higher than Mount St. Helens dome

10-08-04
Predictions For Mount St. Helens Change! (Scientist now predict another 1980-type blast)

10-07-04
Mount St. Helens Volcanic Eruptions: 1980 vs. Now (Great History)
Mount St. Helens' Crater Floor Rising

10-05-04
Mount St. Helens Vents Biggest Steam Plume Yet Along With Cloud of Ash (Tuesday Morning)
Mount St. Helens going off again?

10-03-04
Mount St. Helens Releasing Green House gasses
Mount St. Helens evacuated; substantial eruption "imminent"

10-02-04
U.S. Warns of Big Mount St. Helens Blast
U.S. Raises Alert for Mount St. Helens [LIVE THREAD]
Mount St. Helens Erupts After 18 Years
Mount St. Helens is not finished, earthquake activity resumes
Steam eruption under way at Mount St. Helens
Mount St Helens steam cloud (Update: Second eruption imminent; area evacuation reported)


09-30-04
Experts Predict Mount St. Helens Eruption

09-29-04
'Volcano Advisory' Issued for Mount Saint Helens
USGS raises eruption alert on Mount St. Helens
Mount St. Helens VolcanoCam
Lava dome growing in Mount St. Helens

09-27-04
Global Cooling ; Mount St. Helens showing the formation of a new glacier

09-26-04
Mount St. Helens Notice of Volcanic Unrest
Mount St. Helens Notice of Volcanic Unrest

09-24-04
Cascade Range Current Update (Mount St. Helens volcano)

5 posted on 10/12/2004 10:10:49 PM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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