Posted on 12/29/2004 3:25:24 PM PST by Truth666
Ashes are ejected from the crater of the Shiveluch volcano in Kamchatka to a height of up to 2,000 m. The height of the ejection above sea level exceeded 5,000 m.
The seismic stations near the volcano register underground tremors from a depth of up to 5,000 m and interrupted spasmodic volcanic vibration.
For the greater part of the past 24 hours it was impossible to conduct video observation of Shiveluch because of bad weather but scientists hold the view that some ejections are accompanied by fragmentation avalanches.
Shiveluch (its height is 3,283 m) is now at the stage of active eruption
Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati
(When all else fails, play dead)
read later
14:51 2004-04-19
Shiveluch, Kamchatka's northernmost active volcano, has erupted a 8,000-meter-high pillar of ash.
The eruption, which took place at 7.26 a.m. local time and which was accompanied by an earthquake that lasted 4.5 minutes, produced an ash cloud, which could be seen at a height of about 1,000 m above the crater for more than an hour, reported the Kamchatka seismological expedition.
A photo from a spacecraft provided by the USA's Alaska-based volcanological observatory shows a clearly discernible extensive thermal anomaly. Seismological stations are registering spasmodic volcanic quakes.
Shiveluch (3,283 m high) reactivated after a long calm this January.
At the moment, the volcano is not dangerous for the settlements of the peninsula. Its activity only threatens the peninsula's transport communications with mudflows.
Good grief that place is one big volcano. I would NOT wish to live there.
Now, OldFriend, if I should have googled for that just think of all the people I would have deprived of feeling so much more intelligent than myself. And, you would not have had the opportunity to chastize me for not googling. :)
Thanks for the insight -- that is why I asked the question. I knew the Freeper community would be able to set the record straight.
Thanks!
Just look at all the very large quakes rocking Japan during the Fall... St. Helens, Mexico... the Sumatra Earthquake, so makes sense something is going on -- something more major than people are letting on (IMO)
I had nightmares about the Kamchatka Peninsula for several years in the nineties. I don't know why. Just seeing a map of the region scares the heck out of me.
Good memory:
===
CP: 805, try to shoot the target with missiles.
805: Yes, I am trying missiles now
CP: OK.
CP: 805, get closer to the target and destroy it!
805: I am doing it.
6.24. CP: 805, are you getting closer?
805: I am watching the target, getting ready for the attack.
805: Missile launched.
805: Target destroyed.
éî: Stop the attack.
805: Yes, Sir.
=====================
Though much of the peninsula is situated in the same latitude as the British Isles, its climate is extremely severe. The short June to August summer is cooler than on the mainland of Siberia, particularly on the east, where the effect of the open ocean is emphasised by a cold current. Monsoonal rain is heavy at this season and Bergman noted heavy snowdrifts lying in the south of the peninsula in the second week in June, 1920. Winter snowstorms are frequent and of such violence that travel in them is impossible. Coastal fogs are prevalent in summer. ... The average annual precipitation is 40 in. or more and is excessive in view of the lack of evaporation. The rivers are frozen for 6 months or more.
Much of Kamchatka is tundra-covered; mosquitoes are a terrible plague in summer. In other places is the dense Alschovnik (Alnus maximowiczi) jungle coming quite close to the settlements, and notably to Petropavlovsk, often 7 ft. high in summer and difficult to penetrate even with an axe.
========================
And don't forget the frequent volcanic eruptions. I can't even repeat what the EB guys say about the locals on the peninsula. But hey, except for that it's a Garden of Eden!
It is a long way to the Ring of Fire to this volcano.
USGS has a list of the most recent earthquakes. There have been a few between Japan & Alaska -- which is near where this volcano is.
The scary thing is what happened in 1812 -- around this time of year -- near St Louis, Missouri.
In late January, there was a 7.8 earthquake -- huge for the US. Then ten days later one of the largest earthquakes [recorded] hit the continential 48 states -- an 8.0 quake.
I am not saying this will happen, but there have been a number of 6's and 5's in the Indonesia/India area since the 9.0. One of the things obscured by the 9.0 is that there was a major 7.5 quake less than 4 hours after the 9.0
The ring of fire is still hopping -- but Kamchatka is probably only 5,000 miles away -- maybe only 3,000 to 4,000 miles away.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.