Mt. St. Helens Recharging

Debi

Owner/Admin
Staff
Joined
Sep 16, 2013
Messages
242,044
Reaction score
235,383
Points
315
Location
South of Indy
Mount St. Helens Is Recharging Its Magma Stores, Setting Off Earthquake Swarms

When it comes down to it, volcanoes spend most of their existence not erupting. If you look at almost any volcano, it might have a bout of eruption for days to months at a time, then go quiet for decades, centuries or more. So when you think about the activity at any given volcano, you should not only concern yourself with what might be happening when the volcano is actually coughing stuff up (erupting), but also when, at the surface, things look perfectly calm.
There are a number of ways to examine what a volcano was/is doing during these periods of repose. My research is like that of a historian, trying to understand what was going on before eruptions that have already happened. I do this by looking at the evidence of changes in the magmatic system recorded in the crystals that are brought up during an eruption. There you find the record of intrusions of new magma occurring frequently, even during times when the volcanic system might not erupt for 100,000 years! So the real action at many volcanoes might be happening kilometers beneath our feet.

Now, if you want to be more like a journalist and look at what might be going in at the moments between eruptions, you can turn to seismology. At many volcanoes, there is a constant background din of small earthquakes caused by magma, hot gasses, hot water, or faults underneath the volcano. They can occur in swarms and across a wide range of depths—from the mantle source of the magma all the way to the surface. You can use the number of earthquakes and their depth to start to weave a story of how magma might be moving underneath a volcano during those quiet periods.

The USGS and the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network has arrays of seismometers on many of the Cascade volcanoes to watch these earthquakes, so hopefully we’ll know well in advance if any of these volcanoes are waking up. It isn’t easy to keep the seismic array on these volcanoes running during the winter, as the picture of the seismometer on Mount St. Helens above image shows! So you should be impressed that we have the near real-time seismic data at our fingertips.
One such story of a volcano recharging is being written right now at Mount St. Helens in Washington. Since the start of 2016 (see below), an earthquake swarm has been detected underneath the currently-quiet Washington volcano. These earthquakes have been occurring from depths of ~2 to over 7 kilometers beneath the volcano. USGS volcanologists and seismologists are interpreting this swarm as a response to the slow “recharging” for the volcano, where new magma is rising up underneath St. Helens as it slumbers. As the magma intrudes, it imparts pressure on the rock around it and it heats up water/releases gases that can add to that pressure. This generates small earthquakes as the rocks shift in response to that stress.

More at site
 
Interesting article. It shows that we know a little about mountains and volcanos and earthquakes, but there is much to learn.
 
It's a good thing the super volcano in yellowstone is still slumbering.
That could have catastrophic events for the entire U.S. and possibly
the world.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Debi
These volcanos are a worry. A real disaster at any moment