Deposits of large volcanic debris avalanches at Mount St. Helens and Mount Shasta volcanoes
Large volcanic debris avalanches are among the world's largest mass movements. The rockslide-debris avalanche of the May 18, 1980, eruption of Mount St. Helens produced a 2.8 km/sup 3/ deposit and is the largest historic mass movement. A Pleistocene debris avalanche at Mount Shasta produced a 26 km/sup 3/ deposit that may be the largest Quaternary mass movement. The hummocky deposits at both volcanoes consist of rubble divided into (1) block facies that comprises unconsolidated pieces of the old edifice transported relatively intact, and (2) matrix facies that comprises a mixture of rocks from the old mountain and material picked up from the surrounding terrain. At Mount St. Helens, the juvenile dacite is found in the matrix facies, indicating that matrix facies formed from explosions of the erupting magma as well as from disaggregation and mixing of blocks. The block facies forms both hummocks and interhummock areas in the proximal part of the St. Helens avalanche deposit. At Mount St. Helens, the density of the old cone is 21% greater than the density of the avalanche deposit. Block size decreases with distance. Clast size, measured in the field and by sieving, coverages about a mean with distance, which suggests that blocks disaggregated and mixed together during transport.
- Research Organization:
- Geological Survey, Vancouver, WA (USA)
- OSTI ID:
- 6595127
- Report Number(s):
- CONF-8510489-
- Journal Information:
- Geol. Soc. Am., Abstr. Programs; (United States), Vol. 17; Conference: 98. annual meeting of the Geological Society of America, Orlando, FL, USA, 28 Oct 1985
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
LANDSLIDES
GEOLOGY
VOLCANOES
WASHINGTON
MT ST HELENS
PETROLOGY
QUATERNARY PERIOD
VOLCANIC ROCKS
CASCADE MOUNTAINS
CENOZOIC ERA
FEDERAL REGION X
GEOLOGIC AGES
IGNEOUS ROCKS
MOUNTAINS
NORTH AMERICA
ROCKS
USA
580100* - Geology & Hydrology- (-1989)
580300 - Mineralogy
Petrology
& Rock Mechanics- (-1989)