Mount St. Helens and Kilauea volcanoes
- Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC (USA)
Mount St. Helens' eruption has taught geologists invaluable lessons about how volcanoes work. Such information will be crucial in saving lives and property when other dormant volcanoes in the northwestern United States--and around the world--reawaken, as geologists predict they someday will. Since 1912, scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano Observatory have pioneered the study of volcanoes through work on Mauna Loa and Kilauea volcanoes on the island of Hawaii. In Vancouver, Wash., scientists at the Survey's Cascades Volcano Observatory are studying the after-effects of Mount St. Helens' catalysmic eruption as well as monitoring a number of other now-dormant volcanoes in the western United States. This paper briefly reviews the similarities and differences between the Hawaiian and Washington volcanoes and what these volcanoes are teaching the volcanologists.
- OSTI ID:
- 6224987
- Journal Information:
- Earthquakes and Volcanoes; (USA), Vol. 21:3; ISSN 0894-7163
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
KILAUEA VOLCANO
GEOLOGY
MT ST HELENS
COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS
FORECASTING
GEOLOGIC HISTORY
HAWAII
HAZARDS
HISTORICAL ASPECTS
LAVA
MAGMA
MONITORING
RISK ASSESSMENT
SEISMOLOGY
US GS
WASHINGTON
CASCADE MOUNTAINS
FEDERAL REGION IX
FEDERAL REGION X
MOUNTAINS
NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
NORTH AMERICA
US DOI
US ORGANIZATIONS
USA
VOLCANOES
580000* - Geosciences