- Background and Information
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DESCRIPTION: Magma, Lava, and Lava Flows — Aa … Ash … Black Sand … Blocks … Dikes … Domes … Flood Basalt … Igneous Rock … Lapilli … Lava … Lava Dome … Lava Flow … Lava Fountains … Lava Lake … Lava Plateau … Lava Tube … Magma … Magmatic Rock … Molten Rock … Obsidian … Obsidian Flows … Pahoehoe … Plugs … Pillow Lava … Plateau Basalt … Ponded Flow … Pumice … Scoria … Tephra … Volcanic Ash … Volcanic Neck … Volcanic Plug …
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- Terminology
- Select Volcano and Related Terminology — All aspects of volcanoes and volcanology including lava flow terminology
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Ape Cave Lava Tube, Mount St. Helens, Washington – Menu
- Big Obsidian Flow, Newberry Caldera, Oregon – Menu — Newberry Caldera Menu
- Columbia Plateau – Menu — Washington, Oregon, Idaho
- Glass Mountain Obsidian Flow, Medicine Lake, California – Menu — Medicine Lake Menu
- Hazards: Lava Flows — Excerpt from: Hoblitt, et.al., USGS Open File 87-297
- How Hot Is A Volcano? — includes lava and lava flows
- Lassen Peak Volcanic Dome, California – Menu
- Lava Domes – Menu
- Lava Lakes – Description
- Lava Lakes – Menu
- Lava Plateaus and Flood Basalts – Menu
- Lava Tubes and Lava Tube Caves – Description
- Lava Tubes and Lava Tube Caves – Menu
- Magma, Lava, and Lava Flows – Description
- Mount St. Helens Lava Dome, Washington – Menu
- CVO Photo Archives – Lava Flows
- Publications and Reports – CVO Online
- St. Helens (Mount St. Helens) Lava Dome – Menu — Mount St. Helens, Washington
- Volcanic Fields and Lava Fields – Description — general information about volcanic fields
- Volcanic Fields and Lava Fields – Menu — general information about volcanic fields
- Volcanic Temperatures – Menu— includes Lava and Lava Flows
- Volcano Hazards Fact Sheet: Hazardous Phenomena at Volcanoes — section on Lava Flows — Myers and Brantley, USGS Open-File Report 95-231
- Other Menus of Interest
- Lava Caves and Lava Tubes – Menu — CVO Menu
- Lava Domes – Menu — CVO Menu
- Lava Lakes – Menu — CVO Menu
- Lava Plateaus and Flood Basalts – Menu — CVO Menu
- Volcanic Fields and Lava Fields – Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/LavaFlows/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
08/18/03, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Mexico Volcanoes and Volcanics — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes Colima … El Chichon … Paricutin … Popocatépetl …
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Map [20K,InlineGIF]: Major Volcanoes of Mexico — includes Barcena … Ceboruco … Colima … El Chichón … Paricutin … Pico de Orizaba … Pinacate Peaks … Popocatépetl … Socorro … Tres Virgenes … Vulcan de San Martin …
- Mexican VolcanoCams— includes Colima and Popocatépetl
- Items of Interest
- Barcena – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Catastrophic Debris Flows Transformed from Landslides in Volcanic Terrains: Mobility, Hazard Assessment and Mitigation Strategies — Scott, K.M., et.al., 2001, USGS Professional Paper 1630
- Ceboruco – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Cinder Cones – Description — general information about Cinder Cones such as Paricutin
- Cinder Cones – Menu — general information about Cinder Cones such as Paricutin
- Colima – Decade Volcano — Decade Volcano Menu
- Colima – Description
- Colima – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Colima – Mexican VolcanoCams
- Decade Volcanoes – Location Map — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]— includes Colima
- Decade Volcanoes – Menu — includes Colima
- El Chichón – Description
- El Chichón – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- El Chichón – Volcanoes and Weather – Menu — general information about volcanoes and how they effect weather, includes El Chichón
- Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History – Mexico Volcanoes
- Major Volcanoes of Mexico – Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Mexican VolcanoCams – Menu— includes Colima and Popocatépetl
- Mexico Volcanoes and Volcanics – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Paricutin Volcano – Description
- Paricutin – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Pico de Orizaba – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Pinacate Peaks – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Popocatépetl – Description
- Popocatépetl – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Popocatépetl – Menu
- Popocatépetl – Mexican VolcanoCams
- Popocatépetl – 1994 Eruption – VDAP Response
- Socorro – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Tres Virgenes – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- VDAP – Volcano Disaster Assistance Program – Menu — includes Colima and Popocatépetl
- VDAP – Principal Volcanic Regions of the World and VDAP Responses 1986-2003 – Map — [Map,91K,InlineGIF]— includes Colima, El Chichon, and Popocatépetl — Modified from: Ewert, et.al., 1997, USGS Fact Sheet 064-97
- Volcanoes and Weather – Menu — general information about volcanoes and their effect on weather — includes El Chichón
- Vulcan de San Martin – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Mexico/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
10/28/08, Lyn Topinka
- Current Activity
- Link to: Current Seismicity — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
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Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Mount Adams
- Background and Information
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DESCRIPTION: Mount Adams Volcano — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes Mount Adams Volcano … Big Lava Bed … Eruptive History … Goat Rocks Volcanic Field … Hellroaring Volcano … Historical Debris Avalances and Lahars … Historical Information … Indian Heaven Volcanic Field … Klickitat … Mining and Mineral Resources … Pahto … President’s Range … River Drainages … Simcoe Mountains … Trout Lake … Underwood Mountain … Volcanic Fields … Volcano Monitoring …
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- Current Hazards Report
- Special Items of Interest
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Adams — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sighting of Mount Adams
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Map [31K,InlineGIF]: Mount Adams and Vicinity — Modified from: Vallance, USGS Bulletin 2161
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Adams Menu
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Adams
- Annotated NASA Images— includes Mount Adams
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in Washington — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073
- Adams (John Adams)
- Annotated NASA Images – Menu— includes Mount Adams
- Big Lava Bed – Description
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Mount Adams
- Cascades Eruptions During the Past 4000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,70K,InlineGIF] — includes Mount Adams
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Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — includes general information on the entire Cascade Range Volcanoes and past Volcanic Activity, including the Washington State Volcanoes
- Current Seismicity – Link — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
- Debris Avalanches – Menu
- Debris Avalanches and Lahars at Mount Adams – Description
- Debris Avalanche of 1921 – Description
- Debris Avalanches of 1997 – Menu — August, October, Menu
- Drainages (River Drainages) – Description
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Menu
- Eruptive History – Menu
- First Ascent of Mount Adams, Washington, 1854
- Geographic Setting
- Geologic Map of the Mount Adams Volcanic Field, Cascade Range of Southern Washington — Hildreth and Fierstein, 1995, I-2460
- Geologic Map of Washington State — [Map,82K,InlineGIF]
- Geologic Mapping in Southern Washington Cascades Project – CVO Project Menu
- Goat Rocks Volcanic Field – Menu
- Gifford Pinchot National Forest — U.S. Forest Service Links
- Hazards – Menu
- Hazards Report and Map — Current 1995
- Hellroaring Volcano – Description
- Historical Debris Avalanches and Lahars at Mount Adams – Description
- Historical Information
- Hydrology – Menu
- Indian Heaven Volcanic Field – Menu
- Klickitat
- Lahars and Debris Avalanches – Description
- Map [31K,InlineGIF]: Mount Adams and Vicinity — Modified from: Vallance, USGS Bulletin 2161
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Adams
- Maps and Graphics – Washington State
- Mining and Mineral Resources – Description
- Monitoring – Menu
- Mount Adams Volcano – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Mount Adams Volcano – Visit A Volcano — information, maps, tourism, links, etc.
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Mount Adams Volcano – Past Eruptive Activity – Graphic — [Graphic,17K,GIF] — From: Scott, et.al., 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-492
- Notable geologic events in the Mount Adams region during the past 15,000 years – Graphic — [Graphic,27K,GIF]— Modified from: Scott, et.al., 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-492
- Pahto
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Adams
- Postglacial Lahars and Potential Hazards in the White Salmon River System on the Southwest Flank of Mount Adams, Washington — Vallance, 1999, U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 2161, 49p.
- President’s Range
- Publications and Reports – Mount Adams
- River Drainages – Description
- Seismicity – Menu — Mount Adams Earthquakes and Seismicity Menu
- Simcoe Mountains Volcanic Field – Menu
- Trout Lake – Description
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Adams — information, maps, links, etc.
- Volcanic Fields and Centers near Mount Adams – Description — Mount Adams, Goat Rocks, Indian Heaven, Simcoe Mountains, etc.
- Volcanic Fields and Centers near Mount Adams – Menu — Mount Adams, Goat Rocks, Indian Heaven, Simcoe Mountains, etc.
- Volcano Names — includes Mount Adams
- Volcano Hazards in the Mount Adams Region, Washington— 1995 Updated Volcano-Hazards Assessment — Scott, et.al., 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-492
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sighting of Mount Adams
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Washington State Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about Washington State Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including Mount Adams
- Useful Links
- Useful Links – Washington State — includes Mount Adams Region
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
- Washington State Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Adams/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
04/17/09, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
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DESCRIPTION: Mount Bachelor Volcanic Chain — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — Bachelor Butte … Broken Top … High Cascades … Kwohl Butte … Mount Bachelor … Mount Bachelor Volcanic Chain … Mount Mazama … Sheridan Mountain … Sparks Lake … Three Sisters …
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- Special Items of Interest
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Bachelor Vicinity — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Bachelor
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Bachelor
- Annotated NASA Images— includes Mount Bachelor
- VolcanoCams Around The World— includes Mount Bachelor
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Annotated NASA Images – Menu— includes Mount Bachelor
- Bachelor Butte
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about the Cascade Range Volcanoes including Mount Bachelor
- Central Oregon High Cascades – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
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Central Oregon High Cascades – Menu — general information about Oregon’s “High Cascade” Volcanoes, which include Mount Bachelor
- Climb A Volcano – Mount Bachelor — “Family Fun – Picnic at the Top”
- Deschutes National Forest — U. S. Forest Service Links
- Eruptive History — Mount Bachelor Eruptive History Menu
- Field Trip Guide to the Central Oregon High Cascades — Scott and Garnder, 1990, Oregon Geology, v.52, n.5 and n.6
- Geographic Setting
- Hazards – Menu — Mount Bachelor Volcano and Hydrologic Hazards
- Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields – Description — general information about Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields, including the Three Sisters – Bachelor Region
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Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields – Menu — general information about Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields, including the Three Sisters – Bachelor Region
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Bachelor
- Maps and Graphics – Oregon
- Mount Bachelor – Climb A Volcano — “Family Fun – Picnic at the Top”
- Mount Bachelor – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Mount Bachelor – Visit A Volcano — information, maps, links, etc.
- Mount Bachelor Volcanic Chain – Description
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Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including Mount Bachelor
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Bachelor
- Publications and Reports – Mount Bachelor
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Shield Volcanoes – Description — general information about Shield Volcanoes, including the Three Sisters – Bachelor Region
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Shield Volcanoes – Menu — general information about Shield Volcanoes, including the Three Sisters – Bachelor Region
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Bachelor Vicinity
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Volcanic Fields and Mafic Volcanoes – Description — general information about Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields, including the Three Sisters – Bachelor Region
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Volcanic Fields and Mafic Volcanoes – Menu — CVO Menu, general information about Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields, including the Three Sisters – Bachelor Region
- VolcanoCams Around The World— includes Mount Bachelor
- Useful Links
- Useful Links – Oregon — includes Mount Bachelor
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
- Central Oregon High Cascades Menu — CVO Menu
- Mafic Volcanoes – Volcanic Fields Menu — CVO Menu
- Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
- Shield Volcano Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Bachelor/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
01/23/07, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
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DESCRIPTION: Mount Bailey Volcano and Vicinity — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — Mount Bailey … Mount Bailey Chain … Diamond Lake … Diamond Peak … Rodley Butte …
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- Special Items of Interest
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Bailey Vicinity — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Map [Interactive Imagemap]: Cascade Range Volcanoes
- Map [25K,InlineGIF]: Central Oregon High Cascades — Modified from: Scott and Gardner, 1990
- Map [23K,InlineGIF]: Southern Oregon Cascades — Modified from: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open-File Report 87-297
- Maps and Graphics – Oregon
- Items of Interest
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Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — includes general information on the entire Cascade Range Volcanoes and past Volcanic Activity, including the Oregon Volcanoes
- Central Oregon High Cascades – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
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Central Oregon High Cascades – Menu — general information about the Oregon Cascades known as the “High Cascades”
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Eruptive History and Volcanic Hazards Assessment— contains reference to Mount Bailey — Excerpt from: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open-File Report 870-297
- Geographic Setting
- Map [Interactive Imagemap]: Cascade Range Volcanoes
- Map [25K,InlineGIF]: Central Oregon High Cascades — Modified from: Scott and Gardner, 1990
- Map [23K,InlineGIF]: Southern Oregon Cascades — Modified from: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open-File Report 87-297
- Maps and Graphics – Oregon
- CVO Photo Archives – Oregon
- Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information on Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity
- Visit a Volcano – Mount Bailey — includes information, maps, driving information, links, etc.
- Volcano Names — includes Mount Bailey
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- Useful Links
- Useful Links – Oregon — includes Mount Bailey
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
- Central Oregon High Cascades Menu — CVO Menu
- Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Bailey/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
01/25/07, Lyn Topinka
- Current Activity
- Link to: Current Seismicity — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Mount Baker
- Background and Information
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DESCRIPTION: Mount Baker and Vicinity — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive Activity — includes Mount Baker Volcano … Geologic and Geographic Setting … Geologic History and Eruptive Activity … Black Buttes … Dorr Fumarole Fields … Glaciers … Historical Information … Hydrology … Hydrothermal Activity … Kulshan Caldera … Joseph Baker … Mazama Ash … Monitoring … Points of Interest … Schriebers Meadow Cinder Cone … Sherman Crater … Summit Cone … Thermal Activity 1975-1976 … Volcano and Hydrologic Monitoring …
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- Current Hazards Report
- Special Items of Interest
- Mount Baker — Living With An Active Volcano — Scott, et.al., 2000, USGS Fact Sheet 059-00
- Brief Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Scott, et.al., 2000, USGS Fact Sheet 059-00
- Geologic and Geographic Setting — Excerpt from: Gardiner, et.al., 1995
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Baker — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in Washington — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073, includes Mount Baker
- Activity 1975-1976 — latest “activity” … thermal activity, steaming, snow melt, etc.
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Assessment of increased thermal activity at Mount Baker, Washington, March 1975-March 1976 — Frank, et.al., 1977, USGS Professional Paper 1022-A
- Baker (Joseph Baker)
- Black Buttes – Description
- Boulder Glacier – Description
- Brief Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Scott, et.al., 2000, USGS Fact Sheet 059-00
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Mount Baker
- Cascades Eruptions During the Past 4000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,70K,InlineGIF] — includes Mount Baker
- Current Seismicity – Link — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
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Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information on the Volcano Deformation Project, including the monitoring of Mount Baker
- Demming Glacier – Description
- Dorr Fumarole Field – Description
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Menu — Mount Baker seismic activity, history, maps, monitoring, etc.
- Eruptive History – Menu
- Eruptive History— Brief Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Scott, et.al., 2000, USGS Fact Sheet 059-00
- First ascent of Mount Baker, Washington, 1868
- Fraser Glaciation – Description
- Fumaroles – Description — Dorr Fumarole Field, Sherman Crater, etc.
- Geographic Setting
- Geologic and Geographic Setting — Excerpt from: Gardner, et.al., 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-498
- Geologic Map of the Mount Baker 30- by 60-Minute Quadrangle, Washington — Tabor, et.al., 2003, Map-I-2006
- Geologic Map of Washington State — [Map,82K,InlineGIF]
- Glaciers – Mount Baker – Description
- Glaciers – Mount Baker – Map
- Glaciers and Glaciations – Mount Baker – Menu
- Hazards – Menu
- Hazards Report and Map — Current 1995
- Historical Information
- Hydrology – Menu
- Hydrothermal Activity – Description
- Infrared surveys, radiant flux, and total heat discharge at Mount Baker Volcano, Washington, between 1970 and 1975 — Friedman and Frank, 1980, USGS Professional Paper 1022-D
- Joseph Baker
- Kulshan Caldera – Description
- Living With An Active Volcano – Mount Baker — Scott, et.al., 2000, USGS Fact Sheet 059-00
- Mazama Ash at Mount Baker
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Baker
- Measurements of slope distances and vertical angles at Mount Baker and Mount Rainier, Washington, Mount Hood and Crater Lake, Oregon, and Mount Shasta and Lassen Peak, California, 1980-1984 — Chadwick, et.al., 1985, USGS Open-File Report 85-205
- Monitoring – Menu
- Mount Baker – Brief Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Scott, et.al., 2000, USGS Fact Sheet 059-00
- Mount Baker – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive Activity
- Mount Baker — Living With An Active Volcano — Scott, et.al., 2000, USGS Fact Sheet 059-00
- Mount Baker – Points of Interest — Summit Cone, Lakes and Drainages, Sherman Crater, Dorr Fumarole Field, Schriebers Meadow Cinder Cone
- Mount Baker – Snoqualmie National Forest — U.S. Forest Service Links
- Mount Baker – Visit A Volcano — information, maps, tourism, links, etc.
- Origin, distribution, and rapid removal of hydrothermally formed clay at Mount Baker, Washington — Frank, 1983, USGS Professional Paper 1022-E
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) — University of Washington’s Geophysics Program’s Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN)
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Baker
- Points of Interest – Mount Baker
- Post-Glacial Mount Baker — Hyde and Crandell, 1978, USGS Professional Paper 1022-C
- Potential Volcanic Hazards from Future Activity of Mount Baker, Washington — Gardiner, et.al., 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-498
- Publications and Reports – Mount Baker
- Schriebers Meadow Cinder Cone – Description
- Seismicity – Menu — Mount Baker seismic activity, history, maps, monitoring, etc.
- Sherman Crater – Description — formation, eruptive history
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Summary of last 14,000 years of activity at Mount Baker – Graphic — [Graphic,25K,InlineGIF]— From: Gardner, et.al., 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-498, Originally modified from: Hyde and Crandell, 1978, USGS Professional Paper 1022-C
- Summit Cone – Description
- Thermal and Hydrothermal Activity – Description — Dorr Fumarole Field, Sherman Crater, etc.
- Thermal Activity 1975-1976 — latest “activity”
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Baker — includes information, maps, driving information, links, etc.
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Volcano Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project, including monitoring Mount Baker
- Volcano Names — includes Mount Baker
- Water-quality effects on Baker Lake of recent volcanic activity at Mount Baker, Washington
— Bortleson, et.al., 1977, USGS Professional Paper 1022-B, 29p.
- Useful Links
- Useful Links – Washington State — includes Mount Baker Region
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
- Washington State Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Baker/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
04/17/09, Lyn Topinka
- Current Activity
- Link to: Current Seismicity — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
- Cascade Range Current Activity Update — includes Mount Hood
- Mount Hood Current Activity Information and Archives
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Mount Hood Volcano — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — Mount Hood .. Geologic History … Eruptive History … Recent Eruptions … Admiral Lord Hood … Crater Rock … Earthquakes … Fumaroles … Glaciers … Hydrology … Monitoring … Mount Hood National Forest … Points of Interest … Wy’East …
- Current Hazards Report
- Special Items of Interest
- Mount Hood — History and Hazards of Oregon’s Most Recently Active Volcano – Report — Gardner, et.al., 2000, FS060-00
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Hood Vicinity — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sighting of Mount Hood
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Hood
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Hood
- Annotated NASA Images— includes Mount Hood
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in Oregon — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073
- Admiral Lord Hood
- Annotated NASA Images – Menu— includes Mount Hood
- Annotated NASA Images – Mount Hood, Mount Adams, and Mount St. Helens, September 1994
- Annotated NASA Images – Mount Hood, Mount Jefferson, and the Three Sisters, August 1985
- Archives – Seismic Information
- At risk volcano hazards from Mount Hood, Oregon — Wessells and Matrazzo, 1998, videocassette, 14 minutes
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Mount Hood
- Cascades Eruptions During the Past 4000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,70K,InlineGIF] — includes Mount Hood
- Crater Rock Lava Dome – Description
- Current Activity – Menu — includes Mount Hood
- Current Seismicity, Mount Hood – Link — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
- Danger of Collapsing Lava Domes – Lessons for Mount Hood, Oregon – Report — Brantley and Scott, 1993
- Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project, including the monitoring of Oregon Volcanoes
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Menu — Mount Hood seismic history, current seismicity, and current monitoring
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) – Information and Maps — University of Washington’s Geophysics Program’s Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN), includes maps and links
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) – Washington and Oregon – 1998 Map
— [Map,40K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: University of Washington Geophysic Program, 1998 - Eruptive History – Menu — Mount Hood Eruptive History Menu
- Eruptive History – Key Geologic Events in the Mount Hood Region During the Past 30,000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,20K,Inline GIF] — Modified from: Scott, et.al., 1997, USGS Open-File Report 97-89
- Eruptive History – Notable Geologic Events Near Mount Hood — In the Past 50,000 Years— Excerpt from: Scott, et.al., 1997, USGS Open-File Report 97-263
- First Ascent of Mount Hood, Oregon, 1854
- Gas analysis of Mt. Hood fumaroles, Oregon – Report — Nehring, et.al., USGS OFR81-236
- Geologic History of Mount Hood Volcano, Oregon — A Field-Trip Guidebook — Scott, et.al., 1997, USGS Open-File Report 97-263
- Geologic Map of Upper Eocene to Holocene Volcanic and Related Rocks of the Cascade Range, Oregon — Sherrod and Smith, 2000, I-2569
- Geographic Setting – Description
- Glacial Outburst Floods – Mount Hood – Description
- Glacial Outburst Floods on the White River – 1998 – Images
- Glaciers and Glaciations – Mount Hood – Description
- Glaciers and Glaciations – Mount Hood – Menu
- Glaciers of Mount Hood – Map — [Map,12K,GIF] — Modified from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU T106
- Hazards – Menu — Mount Hoods Volcano and Hydrologic Hazards
- Hazards Map — [Map,160K,JPG] — From: Gardner, et.al., 2000, USGS Fact Sheet FS060-00, based on Scott, et.al., 1997
- Hazards Report and Map — Current 1997
- Historical Activity — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, IN: AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Historical Seismicity – Menu — information from 1977 to today
- History and Hazards of Oregon’s Most Recently Active Volcano – Mount Hood — Gardner, et.al., 2000, FS060-00
- Hood (Admiral Lord Hood)
- Hood River – River Drainages Menu
- Hydrology – Menu — Mount Hood Hydrology Menu
- Hydrothermal alteration in the Mount Hood area, Oregon – Report — Bargar et.al., 1993, USGS Bulletin 2054
- Hydrothermal Areas – Description
- Ice Volumes on Cascade Volcanoes; Mount Rainier, Mount Hood, Three Sisters, and Mount Shasta – Report — Driedger and Kennard, 1986, PP1365
- July 1980 Mt. Hood earthquake swarm – Report — Rite and Iyer, 1981, USGS Open-File Report 81-48
- Key Geologic Events in the Mount Hood Region During the Past 30,000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,20K,Inline GIF] — Modified from: Scott, et.al., 1997, USGS Open-File Report 97-89
- Lahars and Mudflows – Menu — Mount Hood Lahars and Mudflows Menu
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Hood
- Marmot Dam Breach, Sandy River, Oregon, October 19, 2007 – CVO Research Project — Jon Major Project
- Measurements of slope distances and vertical angles at Mount Baker and Mount Rainier, Washington, Mount Hood and Crater Lake, Oregon, and Mount Shasta and Lassen Peak, California, 1980-1984 – Report — Chadwick, et.al., 1985, USGS Open-File Report 85-205
- Monitoring – Menu — Mount Hood Monitoring Menu
- Mount Hood — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, IN: AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Mount Hood – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Mount Hood Glaciers and Glaciations – Description — includes Glacial Outburst Floods … Hazards … Jökulhlaups …
- Mount Hood – History and Hazards of Oregon’s Most Recently Active Volcano – Report — Gardner, et.al., 2000, FS060-00
- Mount Hood – Visit A Volcano — information, maps, driving information, tourism, links, etc.
- Mount Hood National Forest – Description
- Mount Hood Seismic Network – Description
- Notable Geologic Events Near Mount Hood — In the Past 50,000 Years— Excerpt from: Scott, et.al., 1997, USGS Open-File Report 97-263
- Objective delineation of lahar-inundation hazard zones – Report — Iverson, Schilling, and Vallance, 1998, GSA Bulletin v.110, no.8
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) – Information — University of Washington’s Geophysics Program’s Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN), includes maps and links
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) – Washington and Oregon – 1998 Map
— [Map,40K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: University of Washington Geophysic Program, 1998 - Panorama Point County Park — Great spot to view Mount Hood
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Hood
- CVO Photo Archives – 1998 Glacial Outburst Floods on White River
- Points of Interest – Description
- Polallie Creek – River Drainages Menu — includes 1980 debris flow and dam break
- Polallie Creek Debris Flow and Subsequent Dam-Break Flood, East Fork Hood River Basin, Oregon (1980) – Report — Gallino and Pierson, 1984, OFR84-578
- Post-Glacial Lahars of the Sandy River Basin, Mount Hood, Oregon – Report — Cameron and Pringle, 1986, Northwest Science, v.60, n.4
- Publications and Reports – Mount Hood
- Recent Eruptive History of Mount Hood, Oregon, and Potential Hazards from Future Eruptions – Report — Crandell, 1980
- Recent (Historic?) Pumice — Excerpt from: Crandell, 1980, USGS Bulletin 1492
- River Drainages – Menu — Pollallie, Sandy, White, etc.
- Salmon River – River Drainages Menu
- Sandy Glacier Volcano – Description
- Sandy River – River Drainages Menu
- Seismic studies at the Mt. Hood Volcano, northern Cascade Range, Oregon – Report — Green, et.al., 1979, USGS Open-File Report 79-1261
- Seismicity – Menu — Mount Hood seismic history, current seismicity, and current monitoring
- Springs on and in the vicinity of Mount Hood volcano, Oregon – Report — Nathenson, 2004, USGS Open-File Report 2004-1298
- Thermal Areas and Activity – Description — Hot spots and thermal areas, Crater Rock, Devil’s Kitchen, and more
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Hood — includes information, maps, links, etc.
- Volcanic Emissions and Global Change Project – Menu — general information about the Project, including the monitoring of Mount Hood
- Volcanic hazards at Mount Hood related to growth of a lava dome near Crater Rock – Graphic — [Graphic,22K,GIF] — From: Brantley and Scott, 1993
- Volcanic Rocks of Mount Hood — Excerpt from: Crandell, 1980, USGS Bulletin 1492
- VolcanoCams Around The World— includes Mount Hood
- Volcano Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information on the Volcano Deformation Project, including the monitoring of Mount Hood
- Volcano Hazards in the Mount Hood Region, Oregon – Report — 1997 Updated Hazards Assessment Report — USGS Open-File Report 97-89
- Volcano Names — includes Mount Hood
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sighting of Mount Hood
- White River – River Drainages Menu
- White River Glacial Outburst Floods – 1998 – Images
- Wy’East – Description
- ZigZag River – River Drainages Menu
- Useful Links
- Useful Links – Oregon — includes Mount Hood
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
- Central Oregon High Cascades Menu — CVO Menu
- Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Hood/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
06/24/09, Lyn Topinka
- Current Activity
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Mount Jefferson
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Mount Jefferson Volcano — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes Detroit Lake … Glaciers and Glaciations … Mount Jefferson … Park Butte … River Drainages … Waldo Glacier … Whitewater Glacier …
- Current Hazards Report
- Special Items of Interest
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Jefferson Vicinity — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sighting and naming of Mount Jefferson
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in Oregon — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073, includes Mount Jefferson
- Annotated NASA Images – Menu— includes Mount Jefferson
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Mount Jefferson
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about the Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including Oregon Volcanoes
- Cascades Eruptions During the Past 4000 Years — [Graphic,70K,InlineGIF] — includes Mount Jefferson
- Central Oregon High Cascades – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Central Oregon High Cascades – Menu — general information about the Oregon’s “High Cascade” Volcanoes
- Debris Flows from Failures of Neoglacial-Age Moraine Dams in the Three Sisters and Mount Jefferson Wilderness Areas, Oregon — O’Conner, et.al., 2001, USGS Professional Paper 1606.
- Dee Wright Observatory — you can see Mount Jefferson from the “Observatory”
- Eruptive History – Menu — Mount Jefferson Eruptive History Menu
- First Ascent of Mount Jefferson, Oregon, 1888
- Geographic Setting
- Geologic Map of Upper Eocene to Holocene Volcanic and Related Rocks of the Cascade Range, Oregon — Sherrod and Smith, 2000, I-2569
- Glaciers and Glaciations
- Hazards – Menu — Mount Jefferson Volcano and Hydrologic Hazards Menu
- Hazards Report and Map — Current, 1999
- Jefferson (Mount Jefferson) Volcano – Description
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Jefferson
- Maps and Graphics – Oregon
- Mount Jefferson Volcano – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Mount Jefferson Volcano – “Visit A Volcano” — information, maps, links, etc.
- Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including Mount Jefferson
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) — Information and links
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network – Washington and Oregon – 1998 Map — [Map,40K,InlineGIF]
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network – Washington and Oregon – 2003 Information and Map — Moran, 2005, USGS Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5211
- Past Events at Mount Jefferson — Excerpt from: Walder, et.al., 1999
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Jefferson
- Publications and Reports – Mount Jefferson
- River Drainages – Description
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Jefferson — includes information, maps, links, etc.
- VolcanoCams Around The World— occasionally includes Mount Jefferson
- Volcano Hazards in the Mount Jefferson Region, Oregon — Walder, et.al., 1999, USGS Open-File Report 99-24
- Volcano Names — includes Mount Jefferson
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sighting and naming of Mount Jefferson
- Waldo Glacier – Description
- Whitewater Glacier – Description
- Useful Links
- Useful Links – Oregon — includes Mount Jefferson
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
- Central Oregon High Cascades Menu — CVO Menu
- Oregon Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Jefferson/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
05/21/07, Lyn Topinka
- Current Activity
- Link to: Current Seismicity — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
- Cascade Range Current Activity Update — includes Mount Rainier
- Mount Rainier Current Activity Information and Archives
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Mount Rainier Volcano — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — including Mount Rainier … Mount Rainier National Park … Camp Muir … Carbon Glacier … Cowlitz Glacier … Earthquakes … Electron Mudflow … Emmons Glacier … Eruptive History … Glaciers … Historical Information … Historical Mudflows … Hydrology … Hyrdrothermal Activity … Ingraham Glacier … Kautz Glacier … Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground … Longmire Springs … McClure Rock … Monitoring … Nisqually Glacier … Osceola Mudflow … Paradise Lahar … Peter Rainier … Puyallup Glacier … River Drainages … Russell Glacier … Round Pass Mudflow … Seismicity … South Tahoma Glacier … “Tahoma” … Tolmie Peak … Van Trump … Volcano Monitoring … Wapowety Cleaver … Willis Wall … Wilson Glacier … Winthrop Glacier … etc.
- Current Hazards Report
- Special Items of Interest
- Mount Rainier — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989
- Proposed Monitoring Sites, 2007 — information, maps, and images
- Summary of Notable Events at Mount Rainier — modified from Scott, et.al., 1995, Tables 1, 2, and 3
- History and Hazards of Mount Rainier, Washington — Sisson, 1995
- Mount Rainier – Living Safely With a Volcano in Your Backyard — Driedger and Scott, 2008
- Living with a Volcano in your Backyard — An Educator’s Guide with Emphasis on Mount Rainier — Driedger, Doherty, and Dixon, (Project Coordinators), 2005, USGS and NPS, General Information Product 19
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Rainier National Park — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sightings of Mount Rainier
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Rainier
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Rainier
- Annotated NASA Images— includes Mount Rainier
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in Washington State — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073, includes Mount Rainier
- Annotated NASA Image – Mount Rainier, Washington, September 1994 — [Image,80K,InlineJPG] — NASA photo, courtesy NASA Earth From Space, modified with text by USGS/CVO
- Annotated NASA Images – Menu— includes Mount Rainier and other Washington State Volcanoes
- Archives – Current Activity Information and Archives
- Areas inundated by mudflows from Mount Rainier in the last 5,600 years – Map — [Map,23K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Sisson, 1995
- Carbon River
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Mount Rainier
- Cascades Eruptions During the Past 4,000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,110K,InlineGIF] — includes Mount Rainier
- Cowlitz River
- Current Activity Menu – Mount Rainier
- Current Seismicity – Link — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
- Debris Flows, Mudflows, and Lahars – Menu — Mount Rainier’s Historical and Modern Debris Flows Menu
- Decade Volcanoes – Menu — The aim of the Decade Volcanoes project is to direct attention to a small number of selected, active volcanoes world-wide and to encourage the establishment of a range of research and public-awareness activities aimed at enhancing an understanding of the volcanoes and the hazards posed by them … includes Mount Rainier
- Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project and the monitoring of the Cascade Volcanoes, including Mount Rainier
- Dry Tilt Network at Mount Rainier, Washington — Dzurisin, Johnson, and Symonds, 1983, USGS Open-File Report 83-277
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Menu — Mount Rainier Earthquakes and Seismicity, includes historical, plots, charts, links
- Electron and other Historical Mudflows – Menu
- Eruptive History – Menu
- Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Eruptive History – Summary of Notable Events at Mount Rainier — modified from Scott, et.al., 1995, Tables 1, 2, and 3
- First ascent of Mount Rainier, Washington, 1870
- Geographic Setting – Description
- Geologic Map of Washington State — [Map,82K,InlineGIF]
- The Geologic Story of Mount Rainier — Crandell, 1969
- Geology of Interactions of Volcanoes, Snow, and Water – CVO Project Menu — includes Mount Rainier
- Geology of Mount Rainier National Park — Fiske, et.al., 1963
- Glacial Outburst Floods – Glaciers Menu
- Glaciers and Glaciations – Menu
- Glaciers and Glaciations, Glacier Hazards, Glacial Outburst Floods – Mount Rainier – Descriptions — including Glaciations … Glaciers … Glacial Outburst Floods … Jökulhlaups … Kautz Creek 1947 … Nisqually River … Tahoma Creek …
- Glaciers and Glacier Features — Excerpt from: Driedger, 1986, includes Mount Rainier references
- Glacier Hazards and Glacial Outburst Floods – Description
- Glaciers of Mount Rainier — Driedger, 1992, USGS Open-File Report 92-474
- Glaciers of Mount Rainier – Map— [Map,27K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Drieger, 1992, USGS Open-File Report 92-474
- Glacier-Generated Debris Flows at Mount Rainier — Walder and Driedger, 1993, USGS Open-File Report 93-124
- Hazards – Menu
- Hazards Map and Report — Current 1998
- Hazards Map [270K,PDF] — Hazards zones for lahars, lava flows, and pyroclastic flows from Mount Rainier — PDF Format — From: Scott, et.al., 1998, USGS Fact Sheet 065-97, based on Hoblitt, et.al., 1998, USGS Open-File Report 98-428
- Hazards “Posters” — Four “Poster-Style” Maps to download covering the hazards of Mount Rainier; “Osceola and Electron Mudflows”; “Lava and Pyroclastic Flow Hazards”; “Lahar Hazards”; “Ashfall Hazards”
- Hazards Report and Map — Current 1998
- Historical Debris Flows and Mudflows – Menu — including Osceola and Electron Mudflows
- Historical Information
- History and Hazards of Mount Rainier, Washington — Sisson, 1995
- History of Landslides and Debris Flows at Mount Rainier — Scott and Vallance, 1993
- Holocene Tephras from Mount Rainier – Graphic — From: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Hydrology – Menu — Mount Rainier’s Hydrology and Hydrologic Processes Menu
- Hydrothermal Areas – Description
- Ice Volumes on Cascade Volcanoes; Mount Rainier, Mount Hood, Three Sisters, and Mount Shasta — Driedger and Kennard, 1986, PP 1365
- Kautz Creek
- Lahars and Mudflows – Menu — Mount Rainier lahars and mudflows, including the Osceoal and Electron, also includes modern-day lahars
- Lahar Warning System — Puyallup Valley
- Living Safely With a Volcano in Your Backyard — Driedger and Scott, 2008
- Living with a Volcano in your Backyard — An Educator’s Guide with Emphasis on Mount Rainier — Driedger, Doherty, and Dixon, (Project Coordinators), 2005, USGS and NPS, General Interest Publication 19
- Living With A Volcano In Your Backyard – Volcanic Hazards at Mount Rainier— Walder and Driedger, 1995
- Maps and Graphics – Mount Rainier
- Measurements of slope distances and vertical angles at Mount Baker and Mount Rainier, Washington, Mount Hood and Crater Lake, Oregon, and Mount Shasta and Lassen Peak, California, 1980-1984 — Chadwick, et.al., 1985, USGS Open-File Report 85-205
- Monitoring – Menu — Volcano and Hydrologic Monitoring of Mount Rainier
- Monitoring – Proposed Monitoring Sites, 2007 — information, maps, and images
- Mount Rainier — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Mount Rainier – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Mount Rainier – Living Safely With a Volcano in Your Backyard — Driedger and Scott, 2008
- Mount Rainier – Visit A Volcano — information, maps, driving information, tourism, links, etc.
- Mount Rainier Educational Outreach – Menu — Educational Ideas
- Mount Rainier National Park – Visit A Volcano — information, maps, driving information, tourism, links, etc.
- Mount Rainier Vicinity with Select Place Names – Map — [Map,29K,InlineGIF]
- Mount Rainier Volcano Lahar Warning System — Puyallup Lahar Warning System
- Mount Rainier and Mauna Loa: Profile of shield volcano versus composite volcano – Graphic — [Graphic,10K,GIF] — Modified from: Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987
- Mowich River
- Nisqually Glacier
- Nisqually Glacier – Analysis of a 24-Year Photographic Record of Nisqually Glacier, Mount Rainier National Park, Washington — Veatch, 1969, USGS Professional Paper 631
- Nisqually Glacier — The Nisqually Glacier, Mount Rainier, Washington, 1857-1979 — Heliker, et.al., 1984, USGS Open-File Report 83-541
- Nisqually River
- Notable Events at Mount Rainier – Summary — modified from Scott, et.al., 1995, Tables 1, 2, and 3
- Osceola and other Historical Mudflows – Menu
- Outreach – Mount Rainier – Menu — educational ideas
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) — University of Washington Geophysics Program’s Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN), includes maps and links
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) – Mount Rainier Vicinity – Map — [Map,13K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: University of Washington Geophysics Program, 1997
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) – Oregon and Southern Washington – Map — [Map,30K,InlineGIF] — includes Mount Rainier — Modified from: University of Washington Geophysics Program, 1999
- Peter Rainier
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount Rainier
- Postglacial Lahars from Mount Rainier Volcano, Washington — Crandell, 1971
- Proposed Monitoring Sites, 2007 — information, maps, and images
- Publications and Reports – Mount Rainier
- Pumice and other pyroclastic deposits in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington — Mullineaux, D.R., 1974, USGS Bulletin 1326
- Puyallup Lahar Warning System
- Puyallup River
- Rainier (Peter Rainier)
- River Drainages – Menu
- Rockfalls and avalanches from Little Tahoma Peak on Mount Rainier, Washington — Crandell and Fahnestock, 1965, USGS Bulletin 1221-A
- Seismic Monitoring at Cascade Volcanic Centers, 2004 — Status and Recommendations — Moran, 2005, USGS Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5211
- Seismicity – Menu
- Source, age, and description of some postglacial pyroclastic deposits in Mount Rainier National Park — Modified from: Crandell, 1971, USGS Professional Paper 677
- Summary of Notable Events at Mount Rainier — modified from Scott, et.al., 1995, Tables 1, 2, and 3
- Tahoma Creek
- Thermal Areas – Description
- Videos — Mount Rainier videos available through the Northwest Interpretive Association
- Visit A Volcano – Mount Rainier National Park — information, maps, driving information, tourism, links, etc.
- Volcano Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project, including monitoring of Washington State Volcanoes
- Volcano Names — includes Mount Rainier
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sightings of Mount Rainier
- White River
- Useful Links
- Useful Links – Washington State — includes Mount Rainier
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
- Washington State Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Rainier/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
03/25/10, Lyn Topinka
- Current Activity
- Link to: Current Seismicity — link courtesy University of Washington Geophysics Program
- Current Update — Cascade Range, including Mount St. Helens
- Current Activity Information – Archives
- Monthly Seismic – Archives
- 2004 to 2008 Eruption Menu
- Photo Archives
- “Real-Time” Hydrologic Monitoring — water levels, streamflow, information, history, plots …
- National Monument Link
- Link to: Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument— NOTE: we are NOT the National Monument … click on their website for information about visitor centers, trails, hours, events, etc.
- VolcanoCam
- VolcanoCam — “Live” view from Johnston Ridge Observatory. — Link courtesy U.S. Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot National Forest, Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument Please note – the VolcanoCam is not ours, it belongs to the National Monument. We are simply providing a link to their site. If you have any questions about the VolcanoCam please contact them.
- VolcanoCam FAQ’s
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Mount St. Helens Volcano — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes Baron St. Helens … Early Documentation … Eruptive History … First Ascent … Historical Information … Hydrologic Setting … Lava Dome … May 18, 1980 … Monitoring … Northwest Legends … Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument …
- Current Hazards Report
- Eruption Menus
- May 18, 1980 Eruption Menu — Begins March 1980
- 2004 to 2008 Eruption Menu
- Special Items of Interest
- A Volcano Rekindled: The Renewed Eruption of Mount St. Helens, 2004-2006 — Sherrod, Scott, and Stauffer, (editors), 2008, USGS Professional Paper 1750
- 30 Cool Facts about Mount St. Helens – Poster — Driedger, et.al, 2010, USGS GIP103
- Mount St. Helens Erupts Again — Activity from September 2004 through March 2005 — Major, et.al., 2005
- U.S. Geological Survey’s Alert Notification System for Volcanic Activity — Gardner and Guffanti, 2006, USGS Fact Sheet 2006-3139
- The 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Lipman and Mullineaux, (eds.), 1981, USGS Professional Paper 1250, 844p.
- Eruptions of Mount St. Helens: Past, Present, and Future — Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Mount St. Helens — From the 1980 Eruption to 2000 — Brantley and Myers, 2000
- Mount St. Helens – Points of Interest — “Armchair Tour”
- Visit A Volcano – Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sightings of Mount St. Helens
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Maps and Graphics – Mount St. Helens — includes maps, diagrams, seismicity, dome growth, etc.
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount St. Helens – Menu
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount St. Helens, 1980-2004
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount St. Helens, 2004 to Current
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount St. Helens – Listed by Topics
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount St. Helens General Slide Set — 50 Images of General Interest, 1980-1990
- CVO Photo Archives – Annotated NASA Images — NASA Photography with annotation by CVO
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- 30 Cool Facts about Mount St. Helens – Poster — Driedger, et.al, 2010, USGS GIP103
- A Volcano Rekindled: The Renewed Eruption of Mount St. Helens, 2004-2006 — Sherrod, Scott, and Stauffer, (editors), 2008, USGS Professional Paper 1750
- Acoustic Flow Monitors (AFM) – CVO Project Menu — Detecting Debris Flows Using Ground Vibrations
- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in Washington — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073, includes Mount St. Helens
- Advisories and Emergency Response – Menu
- Airborne Thermal Imaging
- Alert Levels for the Cascade Range Volcanoes – Information
- Alleyne Fitzherbert – “Baron St. Helens”
- Annotated NASA Images – Mount St. Helens – Menu
- Annotated NASA Image – Mount St. Helens, Washington, September 1994 — [Image,99K,InlineJPG] — NASA Photo, courtesy NASA Earth From Space; Modified with text by USGS/CVO
- Ape Cave Lava Tube – Menu
- April 1980— included within the May 18, 1980 menu
- Archives — Mount St. Helens’ Current Activity Archives — Daily Udates, Monthly Seismic Summaries, Volcanic Activity, etc.
- Areal Distribution, Thickness, Mass, Volume, and Grain Size of Air-Fall Ash from the Six Major Eruptions of 1980 — Sarna-Wojcicki, et.al., 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Ash and Tephra – Menu
- Ash Distribution (May 18, 1980) across the United States – map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Ash Eruption and Fallout — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Ash Fall – Mount St. Helens volcanic-ash fall in the Bull Run watershed, Oregon, March-June 1980 — Shulters and Clifton, 1981, USGS Circular 850-A
- Ash Plume Path – Map — [Map,22K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Sarna-Wojcicki, et.al., 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- August 7, 1980 Eruption – Observations of the Eruptions of July 22 and August 7, 1980, at Mount St. Helens, Washington — Hoblitt, 1986
- Aviation Color Codes — Alaska Volcano Observatory’s “Level-of-Concern” Color Code, USGS Fact Sheet FS030-97
- Baron St. Helens – Alleyne Fitzherbert
- Bean Creek – Menu
- Before and After May 18, 1980 – Photo Archives
- Bulge (1980) – Description
- Bulging of the North Flank Before the May 18, 1980, Eruption — Excerpt from: Lipman, et.al.
- Bulging of the north flank before the May 18 eruption — geodetic data — Lipman, Moore, and Swanson, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Camera – VolcanoCam — “Live” view from Johnston Ridge Observatory. — Link courtesy U.S. Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot National Forest, Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument
- Cascades Eruptions During the Past 4000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,70K,InlineGIF] — includes Washington State Volcanoes such as Mount St. Helens
- Cascade Range – Current Activity Updates — includes Mount St. Helens
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including Mount St. Helens
- Castle Lake – Menu
- Castle Lake Wells Project – CVO Project Menu
- Catastrophic First Minute (May 18, 1980) — Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Changes in the organic material in lakes in the blast zone of Mount St. Helens, Washington — McKnight, et.al., 1984, USGS Circular 850-L
- Channel conditions in the lower Toutle and Cowlitz Rivers resulting from the mudflows of May 18, 1980 — Lombard, et.al., 1981, USGS Circular 850-C
- Characteristics of Columbia River sediment following the eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980 — Hubbell, et.al., 1983, Circular 850-J
- Chronology of the 1980 eruptive activity — Excerpt from: Christiansen and Peterson, 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Clear Creek – Menu
- Clearwater Creek – Menu
- Climb a Volcano – Mount St. Helens
- Coldwater Lake – Menu
- Columbia River – Menu
- Columbia River Drainage – Description — includes description of impact of the May 18, 1980 eruption
- Cowlitz River – Menu
- Current Seismicity — link to daily seismic updates, link courtesy University of Washington Geophysics Program
- Current Updates and Monthly Summaries
- CVO Open House 2005 – Images
- Deadly Volcanic Eruptions –includes 1980 Mount St. Helens
- Debris Avalanche – Description
- Debris Avalanche – Menu
- Debris Avalanche – Rockslide-Debris Avalanche of May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Glicken, 1996, USGS Open-File Report 96-677
- Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project including the monitoring of Mount St. Helens
- Deposits of pre-1980 pyroclastic flows and lahars from Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Crandell, D.R., 1987, PP 1444
- Detecting Debris Flows Using Ground Vibrations — CVO Project Menu — Acoustic Flow Monitors (AFM)
- Direct temperature measurements of deposits, Mount St. Helens, Washington, 1980—1981 — Banks and Hoblitt., 1996, USGS Professional Paper 1387
- Distribution within the United States of May 18, 1980 ash fallout from Mount St. Helens – Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Dome – Menu
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Menu
- Economic Impact of the May 18, 1980, Eruption – Description
- Effects of Mount St. Helens Eruption on Selected Lakes in Washington — Dion and Embrey, 1981, USGS Circular 850-G
- Effects of the Mount St. Helens Eruption on the Benthic Fauna of the Toutle River, Muddy River, and Pine Creek Drainage Basins, Washington — Fuste, 1981, USGS Circular 850-H
- Emergency assessment of Mount St. Helens post-eruption flood hazards, Toutle and Cowlitz rivers, Washington — Jennings, et.al., 1981, USGS Circular 850-I
- Emissions – Menu
- Eruption Advisories and Emergency Response – Menu
- Eruption Summary – May 18, 1980 to September 2004
- Eruptions of Mount St. Helens: Past, Present, and Future — Tilling, et.al., 1990 — good publication covering what happened in May 1980, and the aftermath
- Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington – Professional Paper 1250 — Lipman and Mullineaux, (eds.), 1981, USGS Professional Paper 1250, 844p.
- Eruptive History – Menu
- Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Doukas, 1990, USGS Bulletin 1859
- Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Mullineaux and Crandell, 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Mullineaux, 1996, USGS Professional Paper 1563
- Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, Early History and Volcanic Activity from 1980-1988
- Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990, USGS General Interest Report
- Eruptive History after May 18, 1980 — (1980-1983) — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Explosive tephra emissions at Mount St. Helens, 1989-1991: The violent escape of magmatic gas following storms? — Mastin, 1994, IN: GSA Bulletin, v.106
- First Ascent of Mount St. Helens, 1853
- FLIR – Forward Looking Infrared
- Floods and High Water – Menu
- Future Behavior — what will be the future of Mount St. Helens ?
- Gas Emissions – Menu
- Generalized North-South Geologic Cross Sections Through Mount St. Helens – Graphic — [Graphic,20K,InlineGIF] — Pre-May 18, Bulge, Slide Blocks, 1980 Crater Floor — Modified from: Doukas, 1990, USGS Bulletin 1859
- Geographic Setting
- Geologic Map of Mount St. Helens, Washington, Prior to the 1980 Eruption — Hopson, 2008, OFR2002-458
- Geologic Map of Washington State — [Map,82K,InlineGIF]
- Gifford Pinchot National Forest — U.S. Forest Service Links
- Glaciers and Glaciations – Menu
- Goat Rocks Eruptive Period — Excerpt from Crandell, 1987, PP1444
- Green River – Menu
- Hazards Map – Mount St. Helens Hazards Zones — [regional, large-scale, JPG Format, 467K, 1084x715pixels]
- Hazards – Menu
- Hazards Report – Volcanic-Hazard Zonation for Mount St. Helens, Washington, 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-497 — Current Hazards Report
- Historical Information – Description
- Historical Information – First Ascent of Mount St. Helens, August 26, 1853
- Historical Information – Volcanoes and History Menu
- Hydrologic Data Collection Sites surrounding Mount St. Helens — Current and Historical
- Hydrologic Data Collection Sites surrounding Mount St. Helens – “Real-Time”
- Hydrology – Menu
- Impact and Aftermath of May 18, 1980 — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Johnston Ridge – Menu
- July 22, 1980 Eruption – Observations of the Eruptions of July 22 and August 7, 1980, at Mount St. Helens, Washington — Hoblitt, 1986
- Kalama River – Menu
- La-wa-la-clough
- Lahars – Menu
- Lake Merwin – Menu
- Lakes North of Mount St. Helens Affected by the May 18, 1980 Eruption – Map — [Map,32K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Dion and Embrey, 1981, USGS Circular 850-C, and Embrey and Dion, 1988, WRI-87-4263
- Lakes and Reservoirs – Menu
- Lateral Blast of May 18, 1980 — Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Lava Dome (1980-1986) – Description
- Lava Dome (1980-1986) – Dimensions
- Lava Dome (1980-1986) – Menu
- Lava Dome (1980) – Images
- Lava Dome (1980-2004) – Images
- Lava Dome (2004-Current) – Images
- Lewis River – Menu
- LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) – Menu — includes Mount St. Helens
- Life Returns to Mount St. Helens — Excerpts courtesy of U. S. Forest Service
- Location Map – Cascade Range Volcanoes
- Location Map – Mount St. Helens
- Loowit (Loo-wit Lat-kla)
- Louwala-Clough
- Map – Ash distribution within the United States of May 18, 1980 ash fallout from Mount St. Helens — [14K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Map – May 18, 1980, Ash Plume Path — [22K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Sarna-Wojcicki, et.al., 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Map – May 18, 1980, Devastation — [21K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Map – Lakes North of Mount St. Helens Affected by the May 18, 1980 Eruption — [32K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Dion and Embrey, 1981, USGS Circular 850-C, and Embrey and Dion, 1988, WRI-87-4263
- Maps and Graphics – Mount St. Helens
- Maps and Graphics – Washington State
- March 1980— included within the May 18, 1980 menu
- March 1982 Lahar
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Menu— includes pre-May 18 events too
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Seismogram — [Graphic,561K,InlineJpg]
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Summary
- May 18, 1980 Ashfall – Menu
- May 18, 1980 Debris Avalanche – Menu
- May 18, 1980 Lahars – Menu
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Ash Eruption and Fallout — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Ash Plume Path – Map — [Map,22K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Sarna-Wojcicki, et.al., 1981
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Chronology of the 1980 Eruptive Activity — Excerpt from: Christiansen and Peterson, 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Debris Avalanche – Description
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Description
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Devastation – Map — [21K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Images – entire “story”
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Images – plume only
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Images – devastation
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Images – monitoring
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Lahar – Description
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Lateral Blast — Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Mudflows and Floods — Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Photo Archives
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Publication – “The Eruptions of Mount St. Helens: Past, Present, and Future” — Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990, USGS General Interest Publication
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Publication – “The Eruption of May 18, 1980” — Excerpt from: Doukas, 1990, USGS Bulletin 1859
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Publication – “May 18, 1980 Eruption” — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Publication – “The 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington” — Lipman and Mullineaux, (eds.), 1981, USGS Professional Paper 1250, 844p.
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Seismogram — [Graphic,561K,InlineJpg]
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Summary
- Media Advisory – Interior Secretary Gale Norton visit, October 2, 2004 — [PDF Format]
- Merrill Lake – Menu
- Merwin Lake – Menu
- Meta Lake – Menu
- Mining and Mineral Resources – Menu
- Monitoring Highlights – 2004 to Current
- Monitoring – Menu
- Monitoring Mount St. Helens Debris-Dam Lakes – Description
- Monthly Activity Summaries
- Mount St. Helens – Ash and Tephra – Menu
- Mount St. Helens – Before 1980 — Excerpt from: Foxworthy and Hill, 1982, USGS Professional Paper 1249
- Mount St. Helens – Climb A Volcano — “Family Fun – Picnic at the Top”
- Mount St. Helens – Debris Avalanche – Menu
- Mount St. Helens – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Mount St. Helens – Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Mullineaux, 1996, USGS Professional Paper 1563
- Mount St. Helens – Eruptive History — Early History, Volcanic Activity 1980-1988, Swanson, et.al., 1989
- Mount St. Helens – Eruptive History – Menu — general information about the eruptive history of Mount St. Helens, including May 18, 1980
- Mount St. Helens – From the 1980 Eruption to 2000 — Brantley and Myers, 2000, USGS Fact Sheet FS036-00
- Mount St. Helens – Historical Background
- Mount St. Helens – Lahars – Menu
- Mount St. Helens – Pyroclastic Flows – Menu
- Mount St. Helens – Points of Interest — places to see and how to get there
- Mount St. Helens – Visit A Volcano — information, maps, driving information, tourism, links, etc.
- Mount St. Helens Erupts Again — Activity from September 2004 through March 2005 — Major, et.al., 2005
- Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument – Visit A Volcano
- Mount St. Helens Reawakens — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992
- Mount St. Helens Volcanic Activity, 1980-1988 — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Mount St. Helens volcanic-ash fall in the Bull Run watershed, Oregon, March-June 1980 — Shulters and Clifton, 1981, USGS Circular 850-A
- Muddy River – Menu
- Mudflows – Menu
- Mudflows and Floods — Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Mudflows resulting from the May 18, 1980, eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Cummans, 1981, USGS Circular 850-B
- National Volcanic Monument
- North Flank Bulge – Description
- North Flank Bulge – Bulging of the north flank before the May 18 eruption — geodetic data — Lipman, Moore, and Swanson
- North Fork Toutle River – Menu
- Northwest Legends
- Observations of the Eruptions of July 22 and August 7, 1980, at Mount St. Helens, Washington — Hoblitt, 1986, USGS Professional Paper 1335
- Open House 2005 – Images
- Outreach – Menu
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN)
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) – Mount St. Helens Vicinity, 1996 — [Map,16K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: University of Washington Geophysics Program, 1997
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) – Washington and Oregon — [Map,40K,InlineGIF] — includes Mount St. Helens — Modified from: University of Washington Geophysics Program, 1998
- Past, Present, and Future — Tilling, et.al., 1990 — good publication covering what happened in May 1980, and the aftermath
- Past Updates, Advisories, and Information Statements for the Cascade Range
- Past Updates, Advisories, Information Statements, and Monthly Seismic Graphs for Mount St. Helens
- CVO Photo Archives – Annotated NASA Images — NASA Photography with annotation by CVO
- CVO Photo Archives – Before and After
- CVO Photo Archives – Eruption 2004 to Current – Menu
- CVO Photo Archives – May 18, 1980
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount St. Helens Images
- CVO Photo Archives – Mount St. Helens General Slide Set — 50 Images of General Interest, 1980-1990
- CVO Photo Archives – Pre-May 18, 1980
- Pine Creek – Menu
- Pine Creek Volcanic Assemblage at Mount St. Helens, Washington — Crandell and Mullineaux, 1973, USGS Bulletin 1383-A
- Plot of thickness vs. distance from vent for several tephras from Cascade Range volcanoes _Graphic — including May 18, 1980 — [Graphic,18K,GIF] — Modified from: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open-File Report 87-297
- Points of Interest — “Armchair Tour”
- Post-A.D. 1400 segment of eruptive history of Mount St. Helens – Graphic — [Graphic,30K,GIF] — From: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Post-May 18 seismicity; volcanic and tectonic implications — Weaver, et.al., 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Pre-May 18, 1980— included within the May 18, 1980 menu
- Pre-1980 Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Pre-1980 Eruptive History of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Clynne, et.al., USGS Fact Sheet FS2005-3045
- Pre-1980 Tephra-Fall Deposits Erupted From Mount St. Helens, Washington — Mullineaux, 1996, USGS Professional Paper 1563
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Before 1980 — Excerpt from: Foxworthy and Hill, 1982
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Bulge – Description
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Events Leading Up to the May 18, 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington — March 15 – May 17, 1980 — week-by-week account of the buildup to May 18, 1980 — created for the web by Ed Klimasauskas, May 2000
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Generalized North-South Geologic Cross Sections Through Mount St. Helens – Graphic — [Graphic,20K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Doukas, 1990, USGS Bulletin 1859
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Important Seismic Events, March 20 – May 18, 1980 — Excerpt from: Endo, et.al., 1981
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Mount St. Helens Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Mount St. Helens Reawakens — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – North Flank Bulge – Description
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Photo Archives
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Reawakening and initial activity— Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Using Spirit Lake as a Tiltmeter – Description
- Predicting the next eruption — Excerpt from Crandell and Mullineaux, 1978
- Press Briefings – 2004 Eruption
- Professional Paper 1250: The 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Lipman and Mullineaux, (eds.), 1981, USGS Professional Paper 1250, 844p.
- Proximal Air-Fall Deposits from the May 18 Eruption — Stratigraphy and Field Sedimentology — Waitt and Dzurisin, 1981
- Publications and Reports – Mount St. Helens
- Pyroclastic Flows – Menu
- “Real-Time” Mount St. Helens Hydrologic Monitoring — 1-Day, 3-Day, 7-Day, and 30-Day plots
- Reawakening and initial activity— Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990
- Regrowth and Recovery – Menu
- Research and Projects – Menu — includes Mount St. Helens
- River Drainages – Menu
- Rockslide-Debris Avalanche of May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Glicken, 1996, USGS Open-File Report 96-677
- Ryan Lake – Menu
- Schematic Diagram of West-East Geologic Section of gully bank near NE base of Mount St. Helens, south of Windy Ridge – Graphic — [Schematic,25K,GIF] — Modified from: Doukas, 1990, USGS Bulletin 1859
- Sediment deposition in the Columbia and lower Cowlitz rivers, Washington-Oregon, caused by the May 18, 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens — Haeni, 1983, USGS Circular 850-K
- CVO SedLab
- Seismic Signal Examples — including a small gas and ash explosion — [PDF Format, 915K]
- Seismic Studies 1980 – 1983 — Excerpt from: Brantley and Topinka, 1984, Earthquake Information Bulletin, v.16, n.2
- Seismic Monthly Summaries Archives
- Seismicity – Menu
- Seismogram, May 18, 1980 — [Graphic,561K,InlineJpg]
- September 1997 Debris Avalanche/Debris Flow — information statement, images
- Shoestring Glacier – Glaciers Menu
- Silver Lake – Menu
- Simplified Eruptive History of Mount St. Helens — Modified from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106, Original Simplified from: Crandell, 1987
- Slide Set – “Mount St. Helens General Slide Set” — 50 Images of General Interest
- Small Explosions Interrupt 3-year Quiescence at Mount St. Helens, Washington — (1989-1991) — From: Myers, 1992, Earthquakes and Volcanoes, v.23
- Snow and Ice – Menu
- Some chemical effects of the Mount St. Helens eruption on selected streams in the State of Washington — Klein, 1984, USGS Circular 850-E
- South Fork Toutle River – Menu
- Smith Creek – Menu
- Spirit Lake – Description — includes May 18, 1980
- Spirit Lake – Menu
- Spirit Lake – Surface-water temperatures of Spirit Lake before (1974) and after (1980) the May 18, 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens – Graphic — [Graphic,18K,GIF] — Modified from: Dion and Embrey, 1981, USGS Circular 850-G
- Spirit Lake – Using Spirit Lake as a Tiltmeter – Description
- St. Helens (Baron St. Helens – Alleyne Fitzherbert)
- St. Helens Lake – Menu
- Stratigraphic section in Harry Gardner Park, showing May 18 deposits – Graphic — Schematic [13K,GIF] — L, lithic-rich layer; P, pumice-rich layer — Modified from: Doukas, 1990
- SUMMARY: May 18, 1980 Eruption
- SUMMARY: Eruptions Since 1980
- Summary – Events Leading Up to the May 18, 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington — March 15 – May 17, 1980 — week-by-week account of the buildup to May 18, 1980 — created for the web by Ed Klimasauskas, May 2000
- Summary – Important Seismic Events, March 20 – May 18, 1980 — Excerpt from: Endo, et.al., 1981
- Summary – May 18, 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens
- Summary – 1980 – Chronology of the 1980 eruptive activity — Excerpt from: Christiansen and Peterson, 1981
- Summary – Temperature Studies of 1980 Deposits — Banks and Hoblitt, 1981
- Surface-water temperatures of Spirit Lake before (1974) and after (1980) the May 18, 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens – Graphic — [Graphic,18K,GIF] — Modified from: Dion and Embrey, 1981
- Swift Creek – Menu
- Swift Reservoir – Menu
- Temperature Studies of the 1980 Deposits — Banks and Hoblitt, 1981
- Temperature Studies of the 1980-1981 Deposits — Banks and Hoblitt., 1996, USGS Professional Paper 1387
- The 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Lipman and Mullineaux, (eds.), 1981, USGS Professional Paper 1250, 844p.
- Toutle River – Menu
- 20th Century Volcanic Eruptions and Their Impact — includes Mount St. Helens
- Upper Pleistocene Pyroclastic-Flow Deposits and Lahars South of Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Hyde, 1975, USGS Bulletin 1383-B
- U.S. Geological Survey’s Alert Notification System for Volcanic Activity — Gardner and Guffanti, 2006, USGS Fact Sheet 2006-3139
- Using Spirit Lake as a Tiltmeter – Description
- Visit a Volcano – Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument
- Volcanic Activity 1980-1988 — From: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Volcanic Emissions and Global Change Project – CVO Project Menu
- Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) information — [PDF Format, 1.4M]
- Volcanic Hazards with Regard to Siting Nuclear-Power Plants in the Pacific Northwest — Section on Mount St. Helens Eruptive History — From: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open File Report 87-297
- Volcanic Temperatures — includes Mount St. Helens May 18, 1980
- Volcano-Warning Scheme for the Cascade Range Volcanoes
- VolcanoCam — “Live” view from Johnston Ridge Observatory. — Link courtesy U.S. Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot National Forest, Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument
- VolcanoCam FAQ’s
- Volcano Names — includes Mount St. Helens
- A Volcano Rekindled: The Renewed Eruption of Mount St. Helens, 2004-2006 — Sherrod, Scott, and Stauffer, (editors), 2008, USGS Professional Paper 1750
- Volcanoes of Lewis and Clark — includes sightings of Mount St. Helens
- Washington State Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about Washington State volcanoes, including Mount St. Helens
- What To Do if a Volcano Erupts — information from the Red Cross and FEMA, in volcanic eruptions, ashfall, lahars, floods, includes links
- Windy Ridge – Menu
- Yale Lake – Menu
- Useful Links
- Link to: Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument
- Useful Links – Washington State — includes Mount St. Helens
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — CVO Menu
- Washington State Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — CVO Menu
- Pre- May 18, 1980
- Summary of Events Leading Up to the May 18, 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington — March 15 – May 17, 1980 — week-by-week account of the buildup to May 18, 1980 — created for the web by Ed Klimasauskas, May 2000
- Summary of Important Seismic Events, March 20 – May 18, 1980 — Excerpt from: Endo, et.al., 1981
- Pre-May 18, 1980 – Photo Archives
- North Flank Bulge – Description
- Bulging of the North Flank Before the May 18, 1980, Eruption — Excerpt from: Lipman, et.al., IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Bulging of the north flank before the May 18 eruption — geodetic data — Lipman, Moore, and Swanson, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Chronology of the 1980 Eruptive Activity — Excerpt from: Christiansen and Peterson, 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- May 18, 1980
- Chronology of the 1980 Eruptive Activity — Excerpt from: Christiansen and Peterson, 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Description
- May 18, 1980 Seismogram — [Graphic,561K,InlineJpg]
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Photo Archives
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Summary
- The Eruptions of Mount St. Helens: Past, Present, and Future — Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990, USGS General Interest Publication
- The Eruption of May 18, 1980 — Excerpt from: Doukas, 1990, USGS Bulletin 1859
- May 18, 1980 Eruption — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- The 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Lipman and Mullineaux, (eds.), 1981, USGS Professional Paper 1250, 844p.
- Subsequent Activity
- Mount St. Helens — From the 1980 Eruption to 2000 — Brantley and Myers, 2000, USGS Fact Sheet FS036-00
- May 18, 1980 and later – Photo Archives
- Mount St. Helens Lava Dome – Menu
- Mount St. Helens Volcanic Activity, 1980-1988 — Excerpt from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106
- Possible Future Behavior
- Possible Future Behavior — Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990, USGS Special Interest Publication
- Post-May 18 seismicity; volcanic and tectonic implications — Weaver, et.al., 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Subsequent Eruptive Activity — Post May 18, 1980 — Excerpt from: Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990, USGS Special Interest Publication
- Regrowth and Recovery
- 30 Years Later
- 30 Cool Facts about Mount St. Helens – Poster — Driedger, et.al, 2010, USGS GIP103
- Publications and Reports
- The Eruptions of Mount St. Helens: Past, Present, and Future — Tilling, Topinka, and Swanson, 1990, USGS General Interest Publication
- The 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Lipman and Mullineaux, (eds.), 1981, USGS Professional Paper 1250, 844p.
- Rockslide-Debris Avalanche of May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Glicken, 1996, USGS Open-File Report 96-677
- Publications and Reports – Mount St. Helens — online listing, includes May 18, 1980
- Other Menus of Interest
- Mount St. Helens Volcano Menu — CVO Menu
- Mount St. Helens Eruptive History Menu — CVO Menu
- Mount St. Helens Monitoring Menu — CVO Menu
- Mount St. Helens Reports and Publications Menu — CVO Menu
- Mount St. Helens Photo Archives Menu — CVO Menu
- Mount St. Helens, Washington
- 1980 Debris Avalanche Deposit
- Background and Information
- Special Items of Interest
- May 18, 1980 Debris Avalanche — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Rockslide-Debris Avalanche of May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Glicken, 1996
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
-
Map [21K,GIF]: Mount St. Helens Area Showing May 18, 1980 Devastation — Modified from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- CVO Photo Archives – MSH Debris Avalanche Images
-
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Castle Lake Wells Project – CVO Project Menu
-
Debris Avalanches and Volcanic Landslides – Description — general information debris avalanches and volcanic landslides
-
Debris Avalanches and Volcanic Landslides – Menu — general information debris avalanches and volcanic landslides
-
Effects of Mount St. Helens Eruption on Selected Lakes in Washington — Dion and Embrey, 1981, USGS Circular 850-G
- “Glicken Report” — Glicken, 1996, USGS Open-File Report 96-677
- May 18, 1980 Debris Avalanche – Description
- May 18, 1980 Debris Avalanche — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Menu
-
Mount St. Helens Area Showing May 18, 1980 Devastation – Map — [Map,21K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Mount St. Helens Debris Avalanche Deposit – Description
- CVO Photo Archives – MSH Debris Avalanche Images
- Publications and Reports – Mount St. Helens Debris Avalanche
- Rockslide-Debris Avalanche of May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Glicken, 1996
- Sediment and Erosion – Description — general information about sediment and erosion
- Sediment and Erosion – Menu — general information about sediment and erosion
-
Summary of Temperature Studies of 1980 Deposits — Banks and Hoblitt, 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
-
Temperature Studies of the 1980-1981 Deposits — Banks and Hoblitt., 1996, USGS Professional Paper 1387
- Other Menus of Interest
- Mount St. Helens Volcano Menu — CVO Menu
- May 18, 1980 Eruption Menu — CVO Menu
- Castle Lake Wells Project Menu — CVO Menu
- Debris Avalanche and Volcanic Landslide Menu — CVO Menu
- Debris Dams and Debris Dam Lakes Menu — CVO Menu
- Sediment and Erosion Menu — CVO Menu
- Mount St. Helens, Washington
- Mudflows, Debris Flows, and Lahars
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Map [21K,InlineGIF]: Mount St. Helens area showing May 18, 1980 devastation — Modified from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- CVO Photo Archives – MSH Mudflow and Lahars
- Publications and Reports
- Publications and Reports – Mount St. Helens — includes Lahars and Debris Flows
- Items of Interest
- Acoustic Flow Monitors (AFM) – CVO Project Menu
- Channel conditions in the lower Toutle and Cowlitz Rivers resulting from the mudflows of May 18, 1980 — Lombard, et.al., 1981, USGS Circular 850-C
- Characteristics of Columbia River sediment following the eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980 — Hubbell, et.al., 1983, Circular 850-J
- Deposits of pre-1980 pyroclastic flows and lahars from Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Crandell, D.R., 1987, PP 1444
- Detecting Debris Flows Using Ground Vibrations – CVO Project Menu
- Eruptive History – Menu
- Hazards: Lahars, Debris Flows, Mudflows — Excerpt from: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open File Report 87-297
- Hot-Rock/Snowpack Interactions Project – CVO Project Menu
- Hydrologic Hazards at Volcanoes – Description
- Hydraulic Modeling for Lahar Hazards at Cascades Volcanoes — Costa, 1997, Environmental and Engineering Geoscience, v.III, n.1.
- Lahars, Mudflows, and Debris Flows – Description — general information on debris flows, mudflows, and lahars such as Mount St. Helens in 1980 and 1982
- Lahars, Mudflows, and Debris Flows – General Menu — general information on debris flows, mudflows, and lahars such as Mount St. Helens in 1980 and 1982
- Map – Mount St. Helens area showing May 18, 1980 devastation — [Map,21K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- March 19, 1982 Lahar – Description
- March 19, 1982 – Mount St. Helens Volcano Updates: March-April, 1982 — Excerpt from: Myers and Theisen, 1994, IN: USGS Bulletin 2047
- March 19, 1982 – CVO Photo Archives – MSH Mudflow and Lahars — includes March 1982 Lahar
- March 19, 1982 – Publications and Reports – Mount St. Helens — includes March 29, 1982
- May 18, 1980 Lahar – Description
- May 18, 1980 Eruption – Menu — includes the 1980 Lahars
- May 18, 1980 Eruption Devastation – Map — [Map,21K,InlineGIF] — includes lahar deposits
- May 18, 1980 – Mudflows and Floods — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- May 18, 1980 – Mudflows resulting from the May 18, 1980, eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Cummans, 1981, USGS Circular 850-B
- May 18, 1980 – CVO Photo Archives – MSH Mudflow and Lahars — includes May 18, 1980
- May 18, 1980 – Publications and Reports – Mount St. Helens — includes May 18, 1980
- Mount St. Helens Volcano Updates: March-April, 1982 — includes March 1982 Lahar — Excerpt from: Myers and Theisen, 1994, IN: USGS Bulletin 2047
- Mudflows, Debris Flows, and Lahars – Description — general information lahars and debris flows
- Mudflows, Debris Flows, and Lahars – Menu — general information about lahars and debris flows
- Mudflows resulting from the May 18, 1980, eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington — Cummans, 1981, USGS Circular 850-B
- CVO Photo Archives – MSH Mudflow and Lahars
- Pine Creek Volcanic Assemblage at Mount St. Helens, Washington — Crandell and Mullineaux, 1973, USGS Bulletin 1383-A
- Publications and Reports – Mount St. Helens — includes Lahars and Debris Flows
- Sediment Yield from Mount St. Helens, Washington – CVO Project Menu
- September 16-17, 1997 Debris Avalanche/Debris Flow – Information Statement
- September 16-17, 1997 Debris Avalanche/Debris Flow – CVO Photo Archives – MSH Mudflow and Lahars — includes 1997
- Snowpack and Ice Accumulation – Mount St. Helens – Menu
- Upper Pleistocene Pyroclastic-Flow Deposits and Lahars South of Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington — Hyde, 1975, USGS Bulletin 1383-B
- Volcaniclastic sedimentation in the Lewis River Valley, Mount St. Helens, Washington; processes, extent, and hazards — Major and Scott, 1988, USGS Bulletin 1383-D
- What To Do if a Volcano Erupts — includes Mudflows
- Other Menus of Interest
- Mount St. Helens Menu — CVO Menu
- Mount St. Helens May 18, 1980, Menu — CVO Menu
- Mount St. Helens Snowpack and Ice Accumulation Menu — CVO Menu
- Debris Flows, Lahars, Mudflows Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/MSH/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
07/21/10, Lyn Topinka
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/MSH/May18/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
05/06/10, Lyn Topinka
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/MSH/DebrisAval/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
04/18/08, Lyn Topinka
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/MSH/Lahars/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
04/18/08, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Nevada Volcanoes and Volcanics — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — Adobe Hills … Aurora-Bodie … Aurora Crater … Buckboard Mesa … Black Mountain Caldera … Buffalo Valley … Cedar Hill … Clayton Valley … Crater Flat … Fish Creek Mountains Caldera … Lathrop Wells … Lunar Crater … Mud Springs Volcano … Reveille Range … Sheldon-Antelope … Silver Peak Caldera … Sleeping Butte … Steamboat Springs … Timber Mountain …
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Map [40K,InlineGIF]: Major Volcanic Areas of Nevada
- Map [27K,InlineGIF]: Potentially Active Volcanoes of the Western United States — Modified from: Brantley, 1994, Volcanoes of the United States: USGS General Interest Publication
- Items of Interest
- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in the United States — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073
- Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Maars and Tuff Cones – Description — general information about maars such as Lunar Crater
- Maars and Tuff Cones – Menu — general information about maars such as Lunar Crater
- Major Volcanic Areas of Nevada – Map — [Map,40K,InlineGIF]
- Potentially Active Volcanoes of the Western United States – Map — [Map,27K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Brantley, 1994, Volcanoes of the United States: USGS General Interest Publication
- Western USA Volcanoes and Volcanics – Description — brief description about how the west was formed
- Western USA Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about Western USA Volcanoes and past Volcanic Activity
- Other Menus of Interest
- Western USA Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Nevada/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
01/23/07, Lyn Topinka
- Current Activity
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Newberry Caldera
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Newberry Volcano and Caldera — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — Newberry Caldera … Newberry National Volcanic Monument … Big Obsidian Flow … Chief Paulina … East Lake … Green Butte … Green Mountain … High Lava Plains … John Strong Newberry … Lava Butte … McKay Butte … Mount Newberry … Newberry Geothermal Pilot Project … Paulina Lake … Paulina Mountains … Paulina Peak … Spring Butte …
- Current Hazards Report
- Special Items of Interest
- Visit A Volcano – Newberry Caldera and Newberry National Volcanic Monument — points of interest, maps, links, etc.
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Maps and Graphics – Newberry Vicinity
- Maps and Graphics – Oregon
- CVO Photo Archives – Newberry Vicinity
- Annotated NASA Images — includes Newberry Caldera
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in Oregon — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073, includes Newberry
- Annotated NASA Images – Menu — includes Newberry Caldera
- Annotated NASA Image – Snow-clad Newberry Caldera, Oregon, May 1985 — [Image,86K,InlineJPG] — NASA Photo, courtesy NASA Earth From Space; Modified with text by USGS/CVO.
- Big Obsidian Flow – Description
- Big Obsidian Flow – Excerpt — latest eruptive event — Excerpt from: Sherrod, et.al., 1999
- Calderas and Caldera Formation – Menu — general information about Calderas and Caldera Formation, including Crater Lake and Newberry Calderas
- Cascade Range Current Activity Updates — includes Newberry Caldera
- Cascades Eruptions During the Past 4000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,70K,InlineGIF] — includes Newberry Caldera
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about the Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including Newberry
- Chief Paulina
- Climb a Volcano – Newberry Caldera — “Family Fun – Picnic at the Top”
- Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project, including the monitoring of Newberry Caldera
- Deschutes National Forest — U.S. Forest Service Links
- Dr. John Strong Newberry and Chief Paulina
- Elevations and descriptions for leveling bench marks at Newberry Crater, Oregon — Yamashita, Wieprecht, and Sako, 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-99
- Eruptive History – Menu — Newberry Caldera Eruptive History Menu
- Geographic Setting
- Geologic Map of Upper Eocene to Holocene Volcanic and Related Rocks of the Cascade Range, Oregon — Sherrod and Smith, 2000, I-2569
- Geothermal and Hydrothermal Activity – Menu — general information about Hydrothermal and Geothermal Energy, including Newberry
- Hazards – Menu — Newberry Caldera Volcano and Hydrologic Hazards Menu
- Hazards Report and Map — Current 1997
- John Strong Newberry
- Latest Eruptive Event – Big Obsidian Flow — Excerpt from: Sherrod, et.al., 1999
- Lava Butte Cinder Cone – Menu
- Location Map: Newberry Volcano and Vicinity — [23K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Sherrod, et.al., 1997
- Maps and Graphics – Newberry Vicinity
- Maps and Graphics – Oregon
- Measurements of slope distances and zenith angles at Newberry and South Sister Volcanoes, Oregon, 1985-1986 — Iwatsubo, Topinka, and Swanson, 1988, USGS Open-File Report 88-377
- Monitoring – Menu — Newberry Caldera Monitoring Menu
- Newberry (Dr. John Strong Newberry)
- Newberry Caldera – Climb A Volcano — “Family Fun – Picnic at the Top”
- Newberry Caldera – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Newberry Caldera – Visit A Volcano — information, maps, driving instructions, tourism, links, etc.
- Newberry Geothermal Pilot Project
- Newberry National Volcanic Monument – Visit A Volcano — includes information, maps, driving instructions, tourism, links, etc.
- Newberry Volcano and Vicinity – Map — [23K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Sherrod, et.al., 1997
- Notable eruptive events at Newberry during the past 15,000 years – Graphic — [Graphic,15K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Sherrod, et.al., 1997, USGS Open-File Report 97-513
- Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including Newberry Caldera
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network (PNSN) — Information and links
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network – Washington and Oregon – 1998 Map — [Map,40K,InlineGIF]
- Pacific Northwest Seismic Network – Washington and Oregon – 2003 Information and Map — Moran, 2005, USGS Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5211
- Paulina Peak – Description — Newberry’s highpoint
- CVO Photo Archives – Newberry Vicinity
- Precise level lines at Crater Lake, Newberry Crater, and South Sister, Oregon — Yamashita and Doukas, 1987, USGS Open-File Report 87-293
- Publications and Reports – Newberry
- Shield Volcanoes – Menu — general information about Shield Volcanoes including Newberry
- Visit A Volcano – Newberry Caldera — includes information, maps, driving instructions, tourism, links, etc.
- Volcano Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project, including the monitoring of Newberry Caldera
- Volcano Hazards at Newberry Volcano, Oregon — Sherrod, et.al., 1997, USGS Open-File Report 97-513
- Volcano Names — includes Newberry
- The Volcanoes of Peter Skene Ogden — the “discovery” of Newberry Caldera, Paulina and East Lakes
- Useful Links
- Useful Links – Oregon — includes Newberry Vicinity
- Other Menus of Interest
- Cascade Range Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
- Oregon Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Newberry/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
03/01/10, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: New Zealand Volcanoes and Volcanics — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes Auckland Volcanic Field … Egmont Volcano … Haroharo Caldera … Kaharoa Eruption of ca. 1250 … Kermadec Islands … Lake Taupo … Mount Eden … Mount Taranaki … Mount Wellington … Ngauruhoe … Northland Volcanic Field … Okataina Volcanic Center … Rangitoto Island … Raoul Island … Rotorua Caldera … Rotorua Geothermal Area … Ruapehu … Tarawera … Tauhara Geothermal Field … Tauhara Volcano … Taupo Caldera … Taupo Volcanic Zone … Tongaririo … Wellington … White Island …
- Maps and Graphics
- Map [20K,InlineGIF]: Major Volcanoes of New Zealand — includes Egmont … Maroa … Okataina … Rotarua … Ruapehu … Taupo … Tongaririo … White Island …
- Items of Interest
- Auckland Volcanic Field – Description
- Caldera and Caldera Formation – Menu — general information about calderas, such as New Zealand’s Taupo Volcano
- Catastrophic Debris Flows Transformed from Landslides in Volcanic Terrains: Mobility, Hazard Assessment and Mitigation Strategies — Scott, K.M., et.al., 2001, USGS Professional Paper 1630
- Egmont – Description
- Egmont – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Haroharo Caldera – Description
- Hydrothermal and Geothermal Activity – Menu — general information about Geothermal Activity, including the New Zealand Volcanoes
- Kermadec Islands – Description
- “Lord of the Rings” – Movie — “Volcanoes and Historical and Popular Culture”
- Major Volcanoes of New Zealand – Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Maroa – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Okataina Volcanic Center – Description
- Okataina Volcanic Center – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Rangitoto – Description
- Raoul Island – Description
- Rotorua Caldera – Description
- Rotorua Caldera – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Ruapehu – Description
- Ruapehu – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- South Pacific Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
- Submarine Volcanoes Menu — CVO Menu
- Taranaki (Mount Taranaki) – Description
- Tauhara Geothermal Field – Description
- Tauhara Volcano – Description
- Taupo Caldera – Description
- Taupo Caldera – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Tongariro – Description
- Tongariro – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Volcanic Fields – Menu — general information about Volcanic Fields, including the New Zealand Volcanoes
- Wellington (Mount Wellington) – Description
- White Island – Description
- White Island – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/NewZealand/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
10/28/08, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
-
DESCRIPTION: North Pacific Volcanic Islands — includes Pacific Islands … Anatahan … Asuncion … Guam … Marianas Trench … North Marianas … Pagan … Ruby Seamount …
-
- Maps and Graphics
-
Map, Major Volcanoes of the Mariana Islands, including Guam — [Map,27K,InlineGIF] — includes Agrihan … Alamagan … Anatahan … Asuncion … Esmeralda Bank … Farallon de Medinilla … Farallon de Pajaros … Guam … Guguan … Maug Islands … Pagan … Rota … Ruby Seamount … Saipan … Sarigan … Tinian …
- Map, Major Volcanoes of Japan, includes the Northern Marianas — [Map,33K,InlineGIF] — includes Asuncion … North Marianas … Pagan …
-
- Items of Interest
- Agrihan – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Alamagan – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Anatahan – Description
- Anatahan – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Asuncion – Description
- Asuncion – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Asuncion – Location Map, Japan — [Map,33K,InlineGIF] — Major Volcanoes of Japan, includes the North Marianas
- Esmeralda Bank – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Farallon de Medinilla – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Farallon de Pajaros – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Guam – Description
- Guam – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Guguan – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Marianas Trench – Description
- Marianas Trench – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF] — Major Volcanoes of the Mariana Islands
- Maug Islands – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Northern Marianas – Description
- Northern Marianas – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF] — Major Volcanoes of the Mariana Islands
- Northern Marianas – Location Map, Japan — [Map,33K,InlineGIF] — Major Volcanoes of Japan, includes the North Marianas
- North Pacific Volcanic Islands – Description
- Pagan – Description
- Pagan – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Pagan – Location Map, Japan — [Map,33K,InlineGIF] — Major Volcanoes of Japan, includes the North Marianas
- Plate Tectonics – Menu — general information about Plate Tectonics and volcanic “hot spots” such as occur along the Marianas Islands arc
- Rota – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Ruby Seamount – Description
- Ruby Seamount – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Saipan – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Sarigan – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- Submarine Volcanoes and Volcanics – Description — general information about submarine volcanoes, vents, seamounts such as Ruby Seamount
-
Submarine Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about submarine volcanoes, vents, seamounts such as Ruby Seamount
- Tinian – Location Map, Marianas Islands — [Map,27K,InlineGIF]
- VDAP – Volcano Disaster Assistance Program – Menu
- VDAP – Principal Volcanic Regions of the World and VDAP Responses 1986-2003 — [Map,91K,InlineGIF]— includes Anatahan — Modified from: Ewert, et.al., 1997, USGS Fact Sheet 064-97
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/NorthPacific/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
10/28/08, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Papua New Guinea Volcanoes and Volcanics — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes Admiralty Islands … Bougainville … Davapia Rocks … Kabiu … New Britain … New Guinea … Offshore Volcanoes … Rabalanakaia … Rabaul Caldera … Rabaul Volcanological Survey … RVO … Sulphur Creek … Tavurvur … Tovanumbatir … Turanguna … Ulawun … Vulcan …
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Map [20K,InlineGIF]: Major Volcanoes of Papua New Guinea — includes Bagana … Bam … Karkar … Lamington … Langila … Long Island … Manam … Pago … Rabaul … Ritter … St. Andrew Strait … Ulawun … Victory … Waiowa …
- Map [16K,InlineGIF]: Rabaul Caldera — includes Kabiu … Rabalanakaia … Rabaul Caldera … Sulphur Creek … Tavurvur … Tovanumbatir … Turanguna … Vulcan … Vulcan Island …
- CVO Photo Archives – Rabaul 1994 Eruption
- 1994 Tavurvur Eruption Videos — Need QuickTime Viewer
- Items of Interest
- Bagana – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Bam – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Caldera and Caldera Formation – Description — general information about calderas and caldera formation such as Rabaul
- Caldera and Caldera Formation – Menu — general information about calderas and caldera formation such as Rabaul
- Decade Volcanoes – Location Map — [Map,16K,InlineGIF] — includes Ulawun
- Decade Volcanoes – Menu — includes Ulawun
- Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History – Papua New Guinea
- Kabiu – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Karkar – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Lamington – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Langila – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Long Island – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Major Volcanoes of Papua New Guinea – Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Manam – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Pago – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Papua New Guinea Volcanoes and Volcanics – Description
- CVO Photo Archives – Rabaul 1994 Eruption
- Rabalanakaia – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Rabaul – Description
- Rabaul – Caldera Map — [Map,16K,InlineGIF] — includes locations of Rabaul Volcanological Observatory, caldera margins, and vent locations for various volcanoes such as Vulcan and Tavurvur — Modified from: Smithsonian Institution and Almond and McKee, 1982
- Rabaul – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Rabaul – 1994 Eruptions and VDAP Response
- Rabaul Volcanological Observatory (RVO)
- Rabaul Volcanological Observatory (RVO) – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Ritter – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- St. Andrew Stait – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Sulphur Creek – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Tavurvur – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Tavurvur – 1994 Tavurvur Eruption Video Footage — Need QuickTime (or similar) Viewer
- Tovanumbatir – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Turanguna – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Ulawun – Description
- Ulawun – Decade Volcano Menu
- Ulawun – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- VDAP – Volcano Disaster Assistance Program – Menu
- VDAP – Principal Volcanic Regions of the World and VDAP Responses 1986-2003 – Map — [Map,91K,InlineGIF]— includes Rabaul — Modified from: Ewert, et.al., 1997, USGS Fact Sheet 064-97
- VDAP – Rabaul Caldera – 1994 Eruptions and VDAP Response
- Victory – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
- Vulcan – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Vulcan Island – Location Map, Rabaul Caldera — [Map,16K,InlineGIF]
- Waiowa – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/PapuaNewGuinea/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
10/28/08, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Philippines Volcanoes and Volcanics — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes Mayon … Pinatubo … Taal … Taal NASA Image …
- DESCRIPTION: Pinatubo Volcano — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes 1991 Eruption
- Maps and Graphics
- Map [25K,InlineGIF]: Major Volcanoes of the Philippines — includes Canlaon … Mayon … Pinatubo … Ragang … Taal …
- CVO Photo Archives – Pinatubo
- Publications and Reports
- Fire and Mud – Eruptions and Lahars of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines — Newhall and Punongbayan, (eds.), 1996, Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, Quezon City, and the University of Washington Press, Seattle, 1126p.
- Publications and Reports – Pinatubo
- Items of Interest
- Canlaon – Location Map — [Map,25K,InlineGIF]
- Deadly Volcanic Eruptions — includes Pinatubo
- Decade Volcanoes – Location Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF] — includes Taal
- Decade Volcanoes – Menu — includes Taal
- The 1991 Eruptions of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines — Wolfe, 1992, Earthquakes and Volcanoes, v.23, no.1
- Fire and Mud – Eruptions and Lahars of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines — Newhall and Punongbayan, (eds.), 1996, Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, Quezon City, and the University of Washington Press, Seattle, 1126p.
- Major Volcanoes of the Philippines – Map — [Map,25K,InlineGIF]
- Mayon – Description
- Mayon – Location Map — [Map,25K,InlineGIF]
- Mayon – VDAP – Volcano Disaster Assistance Program – Menu
- Pinatubo – Deadly Volcanic Eruption
- Pinatubo – Description
- Pinatubo – Fire and Mud – Eruptions and Lahars of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines — Newhall and Punongbayan, (eds.), 1996, Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, Quezon City, and the University of Washington Press, Seattle, 1126p.
- Pinatubo – Location Map — [Map,25K,InlineGIF]
- Pinatubo – Menu
- Pinatubo – CVO Photo Archives
- Pinatubo – Publications and Reports
- Pinatubo – VDAP – Volcano Disaster Assistance Program – Menu
- Pinatubo – Volcanic Disaster Averted in the Philippines — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073
- Pinatubo – Volcanoes and Weather – Menu
- Pinatubo – 1991 Eruption and VDAP response
- CVO Photo Archives – Pinatubo
- Publications and Reports – Pinatubo
- Ragang – Location Map — [Map,25K,InlineGIF]
- South Pacific Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
- Taal – Description
- Taal – Decade Volcano — Decade Volcanoes Menu
- Taal – Location Map — [Map,25K,InlineGIF]
- Taal – NASA Image
- VDAP – Volcano Disaster Assistance Program – Menu
- VDAP – Principal Volcanic Regions of the World and VDAP Responses 1986-2003 – Map — [Map,91K,InlineGIF]— includes Mayon and Pinatubo — Modified from: Ewert, et.al., 1997, USGS Fact Sheet 064-97
- Volcanic Disaster Averted in the Philippines — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073
- Volcanoes and Weather – Menu — includes Pinatubo
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Philippines/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
10/28/08, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Plate Tectonics, Sea-Floor Spreading, “Hot Spots”, “Ring of Fire”, and Related Topics
— African Plate … Aleutian Trench … Continental Volcanoes … Convergent Boundaries … East Africa Rift … Eurasian Plate … Hawaiian-Emperor Chain … Hawaii Volcanoes … “Hot Spots” … Iceland Volcanics … Intra-Plate Volcanoes … Island-Arc Volcanoes … Juan de Fuca Plate … Mid-Atlantic Ridge … North American Plate … Oceanic Volcanoes … Pacific Plate … Philippine Sea Plate … Plates … Plate Boundary Volcanoes … Plate Convergence … Plate Tectonics … “Ring of Fire”… Sea-Floor Spreading … South American Plate … South America Volcanics … Spreading Ridges … Strike-Slip Faults … Subduction Zones … Submarine Volcanoes … Yellowstone Hot Spot …
- DESCRIPTION: Plate Tectonics, Sea-Floor Spreading, “Hot Spots”, “Ring of Fire”, and Related Topics
- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Maps and Graphics – Plate Tectonics — LOTS of Maps and Graphics — Plate Tectonics, Cascade Range, World, Earthquakes, Hot Spots, and the “Ring of Fire”
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Active Volcanoes, Plate Tectonics, and the “Ring of Fire” – Map — [Map,27K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987, and Hamilton, 1976
- Axial Seamount – Juan de Fuca Ridge Menu
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu
- Cascade Range and Plate Tectonics – Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Tilling, 1985
- Continental Volcanoes — Excerpt from: Tilling, 1985, Volcanoes: USGS General Interest Publication; and Brantley, 1994
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Menu — general information about earthquakes and seismicity
- Earthquakes, Active Volcanoes, and Plate Tectonics – Map — [Map,35K,InlineGIF]— Earthquakes around the world compared to plate boundaries and the “Ring of Fire”
- Geologic Time Scale
- Gorda Ridge, Juan de Fuca Plate, Juan de Fuca Ridge – Description — Washington-Oregon-California coast
- Gorda Ridge, Juan de Fuca Plate, Juan de Fuca Ridge – Menu — Washington-Oregon-California coast
- “Hot Spots” – Description
- Island-Arc Volcanoes — Excerpt from: Tilling, 1985, Volcanoes: USGS General Interest Publication; and Kienle and Nye, 1990, IN: Wood and Kienle
- Juan de Fuca Volcanics – Description
- Juan de Fuca Volcanics – Menu
- Maps and Graphics – Plate Tectonics — LOTS of Maps and Graphics — Plate Tectonics, Cascade Range, World, Earthquakes, Hot Spots, and the “Ring of Fire”
- North Cascades – Menu — Washington State
- Oceanic Volcanoes — Excerpt from: Tilling, 1985, Volcanoes: USGS General Interest Publication; and Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987
- Olympic Mountains – Menu — Washington State
- Plate Tectonics – Description
- Publications and Reports – CVO Online
- “Ring of Fire” – Description
- Seafloor Spreading – Description
- Seismicity – Menu — general information about earthquakes and seismicity
- Submarine Volcanoes and Vents – Description — general information about submarine volcano, vents, ridges, and mountain chains
- Submarine Volcanoes and Vents – Menu — general information about submarine volcano, vents, ridges, and mountain chains
- Volcano Types – Island-Arc, Oceanic, and Continental — Excerpts from Tilling, 1985, and others
- Yellowstone Caldera – Menu
- Yellowstone “Hot Spot” – Description
- Useful Links
- Other Menus of Interest
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Menu — CVO Menu
- Gorda Ridge, Juan de Fuca Plate, Juan de Fuca Ridge – Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/PlateTectonics/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
08/18/03, Lyn Topinka
Articles for individual plates
- List of tectonic plates
- African Plate
- Anatolian Plate
- Antarctic Plate
- Arabian Plate
- Cocos Plate
- Eurasian Plate
- Explorer Plate
- Farallon Plate
- Gorda Plate
- Juan de Fuca Plate
- Halmahera Plate
- Indo-Australian Plate
- Pacific Plate
- Molucca Sea Plate
- Nazca Plate
- North American Plate
- Philippine Sea Plate
- South American Plate
- Sunda Plate
Paleaocontinents
Other articles relating to specific locations
- Benham Plateau
- Emperor Seamounts
- Geology of the Alps
- Great Rift Valley
- Indian subcontinent
- Mariana Trench
- Mid-Atlantic Ridge
- Mohorovičić discontinuity
- Molucca Sea Collision Zone
- Pacific-Antarctic Ridge
- Philippine Mobile Belt
- San Andreas Fault
- Tethys Ocean
- Tethys Sea
Earthquakes
- Blind thrust earthquake
- Earthquake
- Intraplate earthquakes
- Interplate earthquakes
- Megathrust earthquakes
Other plate tectonics articles
- Alpine Fault
- Asthenosphere
- Back-arc basin
- Continent
- Continental drift
- Convergent boundary
- Crust
- Divergent boundary
- Fault (geology)
- Island arc
- Isostasy
- List of tectonic plate interactions
- Mantle
- Mountain
- Obduction
- Oceanic ridge
- Oceanic trench
- Orogeny
- Paleoclimatology
- Paleomap
- Passive margin
- Ridge-push
- Rift (geology)
- Seafloor spreading
- Seamount
- Strain
- Subduction
- Supercontinent
- Transform boundary
- Transform fault
- Volcano
Tectonic plate interactions are of three different basic types:
- Divergent boundaries are areas where plates move away from each other, forming either mid-oceanic ridges or rift valleys.
- Convergent boundaries are areas where plates move toward each other and collide. These are also known as compressional or destructive boundaries.
- Subduction zones occur where an oceanic plate meets a continental plate and is pushed underneath it. Subduction zones are marked by oceanic trenches. The descending end of the oceanic plate melts and creates pressure in the mantle, causing volcanoes to form.
- Obduction occurs when the continental plate is pushed under the oceanic plate, but this is unusual as the relative densities of the tectonic plates favours subduction of the oceanic plate. This causes the oceanic plate to buckle and usually results in a new mid ocean ridge forming and turning the obduction into subduction
- Orogenic belts occur where two continental plates collide and push upwards to form large mountain ranges.
- Transform boundaries occur when two plates grind past each other with only limited convergent or divergent activity.
- Divergent boundaries
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The East African Rift (Great Rift Valley) in eastern Africa
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The Mid-Atlantic Ridge system separates the North American Plate and South American Plate in the west from the Eurasian Plate and African Plate in the east
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The Gakkel Ridge is a slow spreading ridge located in the Arctic Ocean
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The East Pacific Rise, extending from the South Pacific to the Gulf of California
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The Baikal Rift Zone in eastern Russia
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The Red Sea Rift
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The Aden Ridge along the southern shore of the Arabian Peninsula
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The Carlsberg Ridge in the eastern Indian Ocean
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The Gorda Ridge off the northwest coast of North America
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The Explorer Ridge off the northwest coast of North America
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The Juan de Fuca Ridge off the northwest coast of North America
- The Chile Rise off the southeast Pacific
- Subduction zones
- The oceanic Nazca Plate is being subducted under the continental South American Plate at a rate of 10 cm per year, forming the Peru-Chile Trench.
- Just north of the Nazca Plate, the oceanic Cocos Plate is being subducted under the Caribbean Plate and forms the Middle America Trench.
- The Pacific Plate is being subducted under the Eurasian and Philippine Sea Plates, the latter subduction zone forming the Mariana Trench.
- The Pacific Plate is being subducted under the North American Plate forming the Aleutian Trench.
- The Philippine Sea Plate is subducting under the Philippine Mobile Belt forming the Philippine Trench and the East Luzon Trench.
- The Eurasian Plate is subducting under the Philippine Mobile Belt at the Manila Trench.
- The Sunda Plate is subducting under the Philippine Mobile Belt at the Negros Trench and the Cotobato Trench.
- The Pacific Plate is subducting under the Indo-Australian Plate north and east of New Zealand, but as this map (109 KB jpg) illustrates, the direction of subduction reverses south of the Alpine Fault where the Indo-Australian Plate starts subducting under the Pacific Plate.
- The Cascadia subduction zone is where the oceanic Juan de Fuca, Gorda and Explorer Plates are being subducted under the continental North American plate.
- Orogenic belts
- The most dramatic orogenic belt on the planet is the one between the Indo-Australian Plate and African Plate on one hand (to the South) and the Eurasian Plate on the other (to the North). This belt runs from New Zealand in the East-SouthEast, through Indonesia, along the Himalayas, through the Middle East up till the Mediterranean in the West-Northwest. It is also called the “Tethyan” Zone, as it constitutes the zone along which the ancient Tethys Ocean was deformed and disappeared. The following mountain belts can be distinguished:
- The European Alps
- The Carpathians
- The Pyrenees
- The Apennines
- The Dinarides
- The North African mountain belts such as the Atlas
- The Karst Plateau of the Balkan Peninsula
- The Caucasus
- The Zagros
- The Himalayas
- The Indonesian Archipelago
- The Southern Alps of New Zealand
- The Andes orogenic belt is the latest of a series of pre-Andean orogenies along the western margin of the South American Plate.
- Transform boundaries
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The San Andreas Fault in California is an active transform boundary. The Pacific Plate (carrying the city of Los Angeles) is moving northwards with respect to the North American Plate.
- The Queen Charlotte Fault on the Pacific Northwest coast of North America
- The Motagua Fault, which crosses through Guatemala, is a transform boundary between the southern edge of the North American Plate and the northern edge of the Caribbean Plate.
- New Zealand‘s Alpine Fault is another active transform boundary.
- The Dead Sea Transform (DST) fault which runs through the Jordan River Valley in the Middle East.
From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tectonic_plate_interactions
The Cascades extend from Lassen Peak (also known as Mount Lassen) (3170 m) in northern California to Lytton Mountain (2,049 m) in Canada, just southeast of the confluence of the Fraser and Thompson Rivers. The tallest volcanoes of the Cascades are called the High Cascades and dominate their surroundings, often standing twice the height of the nearby mountains. They often have a visual height (height above nearby crestlines) of one mile (1.6 km) or more. The tallest peaks, such as the 14,411 foot (4,395 m) high Mount Rainier, dominate their surroundings for 50 to 100 miles (80 to 160 km).The northern part of the range, north of Mount Rainier, is known as the North Cascades in the United States but is formally named the Cascade Mountains north of the Canada – United States border, reaching to the northern extremity of the Cascades at Lytton Mountain. Overall, the North Cascades and southwestern Canadian Cascades are extremely rugged, with many of the lesser peaks steep and glaciated, with valleys quite low relative to its peaks and ridges, resulting in great local relief, and major passes are only about 1,000 m (3,300 ft) high. The southern part of the Canadian Cascades, particularly the Skagit Range, are geologically and topographically similar to the North Cascades, while the northern and northeastern parts – the Coquihalla Range, the name of which is unofficial,[citation needed], the northern half of the Hozameen Range and most of the Okanagan Range are less glaciated and more plateau-like in character, resembling nearby areas of the Thompson Plateau.
Because of the range’s proximity to the Pacific Ocean, precipitation is substantial, especially on the western slopes, with annual accumulations of up to 150 inches (3,800 mm) in some areas—Mount Baker, for instance, recorded the largest single-season snowfall on record in the world in 1999—and heavy snowfall as low as 2,000 feet (600 m). It is not uncommon for some places in the Cascades to have over 200 inches (5,500 mm) of snow accumulation, such as at Lake Helen (near Lassen Peak), one of the snowiest places in the world. Most of the High Cascades are therefore white with snow and ice year-round. The western slopes are densely covered with Douglas-fir, Western Hemlock and Red alder, while the drier eastern slopes are mostly Ponderosa Pine, with Western Larch at higher elevations. Annual rainfall drops to 9 inches (200 mm) on the eastern foothills due to a rainshadow effect.
Beyond the foothills is an arid plateau that was created 16 million years ago as a coalescing series of layered flood basalt flows. Together, these sequences of fluid volcanic rock form a 200,000 square mile (520,000 km2) region out of eastern Washington, Oregon, and parts of Northern California and Idaho called the Columbia River Plateau.
The Columbia River Gorge is the only major break in the American part of the Cascades. When the Cascades started to rise 7 million years ago in the Pliocene, the Columbia River drained the relatively low Columbia River Plateau. As the range grew, the Columbia was able to keep pace, creating the gorge and major pass seen today. The gorge also exposes uplifted and warped layers of basalt from the plateau.
- North Cascades
- Coquihalla Mountain (southern British Columbia) — highest peak in the Bedded Range.
- Mount Baker (Near the United States–Canada border) — highest peak in northern Washington. It is an active volcano[5]. Steam activity from its crater occurs relatively frequently. Mount Baker is one of the snowiest places on Earth; in 1999 the ski area (on a subsidiary peak) recorded the world’s greatest single-season snowfall: 1,140 inches (95 feet or 2,896 cm).
- Glacier Peak (northern Washington) — secluded and relatively inaccessible peak. Contrary to its name, its glacial cover isn’t that extensive. The volcano is surprisingly small in volume, and gets most of its height by having grown atop a nonvolcanic ridge.
- High Cascades
- Mount Rainier (southeast of Tacoma, Washington) — highest peak in the Cascades, it dominates the surrounding landscape. There is no other higher peak northward until the Yukon-Alaska-BC border apex beyond the Alsek River.
- Mount St. Helens (southern Washington) — Erupted in 1980, leveling forests to the north of the mountain and sending ash across the northwest. The northern part of the mountain was destroyed in the blast (1980 Mount St. Helens eruption).
- Mount Adams (east of Mount St. Helens) — the second highest peak in Washington and third highest in the Cascade Range.
- Mount Hood (northern Oregon) — the highest peak in Oregon and arguably the most frequently climbed major peak in the Cascades.
- Mount Jefferson (northcentral Oregon) — the second highest peak in Oregon.
- Three Fingered Jack (northcentral Oregon) — Highly eroded Pleistocene volcano.
- Mount Washington (between Santiam and McKenzie passes) — a highly eroded shield volcano. [2]
- Three Sisters (near the city of Bend, Oregon) — South Sister is the highest and youngest, with a well defined crater. Middle Sister is more pyramidal and eroded. North Sister is the oldest and has a crumbling rock pinnacle.
- Broken Top (to the southeast of South Sister) — a highly eroded extinct stratovolcano. Contains Bend Glacier.
- Newberry Volcano — isolated caldera with two crater lakes. Very variable lavas. Flows from here have reached the city of Bend.
- Mount Bachelor (near Three Sisters) — a geologically young (less than 15,000 years) shield-to-stratovolcano which is now the site of a popular ski resort. (Mt. Bachelor ski area)
- Diamond Peak (south of Willamette Pass) — a 8,744 feet (2,665 m) volcano composed of 15 cubic kilometres (3.6 cu mi) of basaltic andesite.
- Mount Bailey (north of Mount Mazama)
- Mount Thielsen (east of Mount Bailey) — highly eroded volcano with a prominent spire, making it the Lightning Rod of the Cascades.
- Mount Mazama (southern Oregon) — better known for its Crater Lake, which is a caldera formed by a catastrophic eruption which took out most of the summit roughly 6,900 years ago. Mount Mazama is estimated to have been about 11,000 ft. (3,350 m) elevation prior to the blast.
- Mount Scott (southern Oregon) — on the southeastern flank of Crater Lake. At 8,929 feet (2,721 m) elevation, this small stratovolcano is the highest peak in Crater Lake National Park.
- Mount McLoughlin (near Klamath Falls, Oregon) — presents a symmetrical appearance when viewed from Klamath Lake.
- Medicine Lake Volcano — a shield volcano in northern California which is the largest volcano by volume in the Cascades.
- Mount Shasta (northern California) — second highest peak in the Cascades. Can be seen in the Sacramento Valley as far as 140 miles (225 km) away, as it is a dominating feature of the region.
- Lassen Peak (south of Mount Shasta) — southernmost volcano in the Cascades and the most easily climbed peak in the Cascades. It erupted from 1914 to 1921, and like Mount Shasta, it too can be seen in the Sacramento Valley, up to 120 miles (193 km) away. Lowest Peak because the Cascades extend from it.
- Background and Information
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DESCRIPTION: Pyroclastic Flows, Surges, and Deposits — Ash Flows … Ash Flow Sheet … Base Surges … Mount Pelée, West Indies 1902 … Mount St. Helens, Washington 1980 … Novarupta, Alaska 1912 … Nuees Ardentes … Pyroclastic Flows … Pyroclastic Surges …
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- Maps, Graphics, and Images
- Publications and Reports
- Items of Interest
- Ash and Tephra – Menu
- Hazards: Pyroclastic Flows — Excerpt from: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open File Report 87-297
- Hazards: Pyroclastic Surges — Excerpt from: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open File Report 87-297
- Mont Pelée, Martinique, West Indies – Menu
- Mount St. Helens, Washington, May 18, 1980 Pyroclastic Flow – Description — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Mount St. Helens, Washington, May 18, 1980 Pyroclastic Flow – Menu
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Mount St. Helens area showing May 18, 1980 devastation – Graphic — [Graphic,44K,InlineGIF] — includes pyroclastic flows, from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
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Nature of Depositional Contacts between Pyroclastic Deposits and Snow or Ice — Walder, 1997, IN: Pierson (ed.), 1997, USGS Open-File Report 96-179
- Novarupta, Katmai, Alaska, 1912 Eruption – Description
- CVO Photo Archives – Pyroclastic Flows – Mount St. Helens
- Publications and Reports – CVO Online
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Pumice and other pyroclastic deposits in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington — Mullineaux, D.R., 1974, USGS Bulletin 1326
- Pyroclastic Flows – Mount St. Helens, May 18, 1980 — Excerpt from: Tilling, et.al., 1990
- Pyroclastic Flows – Mount St. Helens Photo Archives
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Source, age, and description of some postglacial pyroclastic deposits in Mount Rainier National Park — Modified from: Crandell, 1971, USGS Professional Paper 677
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Summary of Temperature Studies of 1980 Deposits — Banks and Hoblitt, 1981, IN: USGS Professional Paper 1250
- Volcanic Temperatures – Menu— includes Pyroclastic Flows
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Volcano Hazards Factsheet: Hazardous Phenomena at Volcanoes — section on Pyroclastic Flows and Pyroclastic Surges — Myers and Brantley, 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-231
- Other Menus of Interest
- Ash and Tephra – Menu — CVO Menu
- Maars and Tuff Cones – Menu — CVO Menu
- Volcano and Hydrologic Hazards – Menu — CVO Menu
URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/PyroFlows/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
04/18/08, Lyn Topinka
- “Ring of Fire”, Plate Tectonics, Sea-Floor Spreading, Subduction Zones, “Hot Spots”
- “Ring of Fire”
- Plate Tectonics
- Earthquakes and Plate Tectonics
- Island-Arc, Oceanic, Continental Volcanoes
- Plate Tectonics and Volcanic Eruptions
- Cascade Range Volcanoes and Plate Tectonics
- East Africa Rift
- Hawaiian “Hot Spot”
- Iceland Volcanics and Plate Tectonics
- Juan De Fuca Ridge – Juan de Fuca Subduction
- Marianas Trench
- Mid-Atlantic Ridge
- South America, Plate Tectonics, and Volcanic Ranges
- Yellowstone “Hot Spot”
“Ring of Fire” |
From: Brantley, 1994, Volcanoes of the United States: USGS General Interest Publication
- Volcanoes are not randomly distributed over the Earth’s surface. Most are concentrated on the edges of continents, along island chains, or beneath the sea forming long mountain ranges. More than half of the world’s active volcanoes above sea level encircle the Pacific Ocean to form the circum-Pacific “Ring of Fire.” In the past 25 years, scientists have developed a theory — calledplate tectonics — that explains the locations of volcanoes and their relationship to other large-scale geologic features.
From: Tilling, 1985, Volcanoes: USGS General Interest Publication
- The peripheral areas of the Pacific Ocean Basin, containing the boundaries of several plates are dotted by many active volcanoes that form the so-called “Ring of Fire”. The “Ring” provides excellent examples of “plate-boundary” volcanoes, including Mount St. Helens.
Plate Tectonics |
From: Tilling, 1985, Volcanoes: USGS General Interest Publication
- According to the new, generally accepted “plate-tectonics” theory, scientists believe that the Earth’s surface is broken into a number of shifting slabs or plates, which average about 50 miles in thickness. These plates move relative to one another above a hotter, deeper, more mobile zone at average rates as great as a few inches per year. Most of the world’s active volcanoes are located along or near the boundaries between shifting plates and are called“plate-boundary” volcanoes. However, some active volcanoes are not associated with plate boundaries, and many of these so-called“intra-plate” volcanoes form roughly linear chains in the interior of some oceanic plates. The Hawaiian Islands provide perhaps the best example of an “intra-plate” volcanic chain, developed by the northwest-moving Pacific Plate passing over an inferred “hot spot” that initiates the magma-generation and volcano-formation process. The peripheral areas of the Pacific Ocean Basin, containing the boundaries of several plates are dotted by many active volcanoes that form the so-called “Ring of Fire”. The “Ring” provides excellent examples of “plate-boundary” volcanoes, including Mount St. Helens. …
- In the Pacific Northwest, the Juan de Fuca Plate plunges beneath the North American Plate, locally melting at depth; the magma rises to feed and form the Cascade volcanoes.
From: Brantley, 1994, Volcanoes of the United States: USGS General Interest Publication
- Volcanoes are not randomly distributed over the Earth’s surface. Most are concentrated on the edges of continents, along island chains, or beneath the sea forming long mountain ranges. More than half of the world’s active volcanoes above sea level encircle the Pacific Ocean to form the circum-Pacific “Ring of Fire.” In the past 25 years, scientists have developed a theory — calledplate tectonics — that explains the locations of volcanoes and their relationship to other large-scale geologic features.
- According to this theory, the Earth’s surface is made up of a patchwork of about a dozen large plates that move relative to one another at speeds from less than one centimeter to about ten centimeters per year (about the speed at which fingernails grow). These rigid plates, whose average thickness is about 80 kilometers, are spreading apart, sliding past each other, or colliding with each other in slow motion on top of the Earth’s hot, pliable interior. Volcanoes tend to form where plates collide or spread apart, but they can also grow in the middle of a plate, as for example the Hawaiian volcanoes.
- The boundary between the Pacific and Juan de Fuca Plates is marked by a broad submarine mountain chain about 500 kilometers long, known as the Juan de Fuca Ridge. Young volcanoes, lava flows, and hot springs were discovered in a broad valley less than 8 kilometers wide along the crest of the ridge in the 1970’s. The ocean floor is spreading apart and forming new ocean crust along this valley or “rift” as hot magma from the Earth’s interior is injected into the ridge and erupted at its top.
- In the Pacific Northwest, the Juan de Fuca Plate plunges beneath the North American Plate. As the denser plate of oceanic crust if forced deep into the Earth’s interior beneath the continental plate, a process known as subduction, it encounters high temperatures and pressures that partially melt solid rock. Some of this newly formed magma rises toward the Earth’s surface to erupt, forming a chain of volcanoes above the subduction zone.
- Located in the middle of the Pacific Plate, the volcanoes of the Hawaiian Island chain are among the largest on Earth. The volcanoes stretch 2,500 kilometers across the north Pacific Ocean and become progressively older to the northwest. Formed initially above a relatively stationary “hot spot” in the Earth’s interior, each volcano was rafted away from the hot spot as the Pacific Plate moves northwestward at about 9 centimeters per year. The island of Hawaii consists of the youngest volcanoes in the chain and is currently located over the hot spot.
From: Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987, Eruptions of Hawaiian Volcanoes: Past, Present, and Future: Department of the Interior/U.S. Geological Survey Publication
- In the early 1960’s, the related concepts of “sea-floor spreading” and “plate tectonics” emerged as powerful new hypotheses that geologists used to interpret the features and movements of the Earth’s surface layer. According to theplate tectonics theory, the Earth’s surface consists of about a dozen rigid slabs or plates, each averaging at least 50 miles thick. These plates move relative to one another at average speeds of a few inches per year — about as fast as human fingernails grow. Scientists recognize three common types of boundaries between these moving plates:
- Divergent or spreading — adjacent plates pull apart, such as at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, which separates the North and South American Plates from the Eurasian and African Plates. This pulling apart causes “sea-floor spreading” as new material is added to the oceanic plates.
- Convergent — plates moving in opposite directions meet and one is dragged down (or subducted) beneath the other. Convergent plate boundaries are also called subduction zones and are typified by theAleutian Trench, where the Pacific Plate is being subducted under the North American Plate.
- Transform fault — one plate slides horizontally past another. The best known example is the earthquake-prone San Andreas fault zone of California, which marks the boundary between the Pacific and North American Plates.
From: Hamilton, 1976, Plate Tectonics and Man: Reprint from: USGS Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1976
- The Earth’s crust is broken into moving plates of “lithosphere”. … There are seven very large plates, each consisting of both oceanic and continental portions, and a dozen or more small plates. … Each plate is about 80 kilometers (50 miles) thick and can be pictured as having a shallow part that deforms by elastic bending or by brittle breaking, and a deeper part that yields plastically, beneath which is a viscous layer on which the entire plate slides. The plates tend to be internally rigid, and they interact mostly at their edges.
- All plates are moving relative to all others. There are grounds for suggesting that the African plate may now be approximately fixed relative to the deep mantle, but if so it is the only such plate. Velocities of relative motion between adjacent plates range from less than 1 centimeter (a small fraction of an inch) to about 13 centimeters (5 inches) per year. Although these velocities are slow by human standards, they are extremely rapid by geologic ones: a motion of 5 centimeters (2 inches) per year, for example, adds up to 50 kilometers (30 miles) in only 1 million years, and some plate motions have been continuous for 100 million years.
- Plates are now pulling apart primarily along the system of great submarine ridges in the world’s oceans. Hot material from the deeper mantle wells up into the gap, and some of it melts and is erupted on the surface as lava or is injected near the surface to crystallize as other igneous rocks. The ridge stands high because its material is hot, and hence low in density. As the plates move apart, the ridge material gradually cools and contracts, and its surface sinks. Ridges generally form step-like alternations of spreading centers perpendicular to the direction of motion and of strike-slip faults parallel to that direction. …
- Where plates converge, one tips down and slides beneath the other. Generally, an oceanic plate slides (“subducts”) beneath a continental plate (for example, along the west coast of South America) or another oceanic plate (for example, the east side of the Philippine Sea plate). A trench is formed where the under-sliding plate tips down, and the ocean-floor sediment it carries is scraped off against the front of the overriding plate. … We know much about the mechanics of these junctions from geophysical studies and particularly from seismic-reflection profiles made across them with instruments developed for oil-field exploration. Farther back under the overriding plate, zones of earthquakes, inclined down into the mantle to depths that reach 700 kilometers (450 miles), show the trajectory of the descending plate. Typically, a belt of volcanoes lies above the part of this inclined earthquake zone, which is about 125 kilometers (80 miles) deep. ..
- New oceanic-plate (lithosphere) material is generated by the upwelling processes at spreading ridges. Old lithosphere is consumed, and recycled deep into the mantle, at the same rate as the convergent trenches. The balance is global only: the formation of lithosphere at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is compensated by subduction primarily in the western Pacific.
- Plates slide past one another along strike-slip faults, which can be either on land or at sea. The best known of these faults is the San Andreas Fault of California. …
- … Plate motions have dominated tectonic and magmatic processes for the past 2,500 million years. …
- … If present major plate motions continue for another 50 million years, Australia will be crowded against China, and the island complexes of Indonesia and the Philippines will be squashed into a mountain system between the colliding continents. …
- Most volcanoes are products of lithosphere-plate motions. The “ring of fire” around the Pacific represents one type of this volcanism. The chains of volcanoes in the island arcs (such as the Aleutian Islands) and continental margins (such as the Andes) around much of the ocean form above undersliding oceanic plates. The main volcanic axis is typically about 125 kilometers (80 miles) above the inclined zone of earthquakes that marks the descent of the lithosphere plate into the deep mantle … so processes related to the descent and to that depth must control the melting of the magmas. The melts that arrive at the surface, to erupt in volcanoes, have been profoundly modified by reactions with the mantle and crustal rocks through which they have risen. Lavas formed in this setting have distinctive compositions and systematic variations that relate directly to their height above the subducting plate. These characteristics permit us to recognize rocks formed in similar settings in the geologic past and to estimate the depths to the long-dead seismic zones above which they formed. Where, in ancient terrains, the volcanic rocks have been eroded away, we now see granites and other rocks which crystallized slowly within the crust from similar magmas.
- The high volcanoes of the Cascade Range in Oregon and Washington — Mount Hood and Mount Rainier, for example — form a short chain of this type, vigorously active until not many thousand years ago but now showing only infrequent activity. The decline in volcanism reflects a plate-boundary change now underway to the west: there was until recently rapid subduction of a small Pacific plate beneath northern California, Oregon, and Washington, but the pattern is presently changing; the San Andreas Fault system is now breaking across the small plate. …
Earthquakes and Plate Tectonics |
From: Noson, Qamar, and Thorsen, 1988, Washington State Earthquake Hazards: Washington State Department of Natural Resources, Washington Division of Geology and Earth Resources Information Circular 85
- Earth scientists believe that most earthquakes are caused by slow movements inside the Earth that push against the Earth’s brittle, relatively thin outer layer, causing the rocks to break suddenly. This outer layer is fragmented into a number of pieces, called plates. Most earthquakes occur at the boundaries of these plates. In Washington State, the small Juan de Fuca plate off the coast of Washington, Oregon, and northern California is slowly moving eastward beneath a much larger plate that includes both the North American continent the land beneath part of the Atlantic Ocean. Plate motions in the Pacific Northwest result in shallow earthquakes widely distributed over Washington and deep earthquakes in the western parts of Washington and Oregon. The movement of the Juan de Fuca plate beneath the North America plate is in many respects similar to the movements of plates in South America, Mexico, Japan, and Alaska, where the world’s largest earthquakes occur. …
- The plate tectonics theory is a starting point for understanding the forces within the Earth that cause earthquakes. Plates are thick slabs of rock that make up the outermost 100 kilometers or so of the Earth. Geologists use the term “tectonics” to describe deformation of the Earth’s crust, the forces producing such deformation, and the geologic and structural features that result.
- Earthquakes occur only in the outer, brittle portions of these plates, where temperatures in the rock are relatively low. Deep in the Earth’s interior, convection of the rocks, caused by temperature variations in the Earth, induces stresses that result in movement of the overlying plates. The rates of plate movements range from about 2 to 12 centimeters per year and can now be measured by precise surveying techniques. The stresses from convection can also deform the brittle portions of overlying plates, thereby storing tremendous energy within the plates. If the accumulating stress exceeds the strength of the rocks comprising these brittle zones, the rocks can break suddenly, releasing the stored elastic energy as an earthquake.
- Three major types of plate boundaries are recognized. These are calledspreading, convergent, or transform, depending on whether the plates move away from, toward, or laterally past one another, respectively. Subduction occurs where one plate converges toward another plate, moves beneath it, and plunges as much as several hundred kilometers into the Earth’s interior. The Juan de Fuca plate off the coasts of Washington and Oregon is subducting beneath North America.
- Ninety percent of the world’s earthquakes occur along plate boundaries where the rocks are usually weaker and yield more readily to stress than do the rocks within a plate. The remaining 10 percent occur in areas away from present plate boundaries — like the great New Madrid, Missouri, earthquakes of 1811 and 1812, felt over at least 3.2 million square kilometers, which occurred in a region of southeast Missouri that continues to show seismic activity today.
- The Cascadia subduction zone off the coast of Washington, Oregon, and northern California is a convergent boundary between the large North America plate and the small Juan de Fuca plate to the west. The Juan de Fuca plate moves northeastward and then plunges (subducts) obliquely beneath the North America plate at a rate of 3 to 4 centimeters per year. … In sum, the subduction of the Juan de Fuca plate beneath the North America plate is believed to directly or indirectly cause most of the earthquakes and young geologic features in Washington and Oregon.
Island-Arc, Oceanic, Continental Volcanics |
From: Tilling, 1985, Volcanoes: USGS General Interest Publication
- There are more than 500 active volcanoes (those that have erupted at least once within recorded history) in the world — 50 of which are in the United States (Hawaii, Alaska, Washington, Oregon, and California) — although many more may be hidden under the seas. Most active volcanoes are strung like beads along, or near, the margins of the continents, and more than half encircle the Pacific Ocean as a “Ring of Fire”.
- Some volcanoes crown island areas lying near the continents, and others form chains of islands in the deep ocean basins. Volcanoes tend to cluster along narrow mountainous belts where folding and fracturing of the rocks provide channelways to the surface for the escape of the magma. Significantly, major earthquakes also occur along these belts, indicating that volcanism and seismic activity are often closely related, responding to the same dynamic Earth forces.
- Island-Arc Volcanics:
- In a typical “island-arc” environment, volcanoes lie along the crest of an arcuate, crustal ridge bounded on its convex side by a deep oceanic trench. The granite or granitelike layer of the continental crust extends beneath the ridge to the vicinity of the trench. Basaltic magmas, generated in the mantle beneath the ridge, rise along fractures through the granitic layer. These magmas commonly will be modified or changed in composition during passage through the granitic layer and erupt on the surface to form volcanoes built largely of nonbasaltic rocks.
- Oceanic Volcanics:
- In a typical “oceanic” environment, volcanoes are alined along the crest of a broad ridge that marks an active fracture system in the oceanic crust. Basaltic magmas, generated in the upper mantle beneath the ridge, rise along fractures through the basaltic layer. Because the granitic crustal layer is absent, the magmas are not appreciably modified or changed in composition and they erupt on the surface to form basaltic volcanoes.
- Continental Volcanics:
- In the typical “continental” environment, volcanoes are located in unstable, mountainous belts that have thick roots of granite or granitelike rock. Magmas, generated near the base of the mountain root, rise slowly or intermittently along fractures in the crust. During passage through the granite layer, magmas are commonly modified or changed in composition and erupt on the surface to form volcanoes constructed of nonbasaltic rocks.
From: Wood and Kienle, 1990, Volcanoes of North America: Cambridge University Press, contribution by J. Kienle and C.J. Nye
- Most Alaskan volcanoes are in the Aleutian arc which extends approximately 2,500 kilometers along the southern edge of the Bering Sea and Alaskan mainland. This classic volcanic arc contains some 80 Quaternary stratovolcanoes and calderas. Aleutian arc volcanism is the result of subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the North American Plate. The 3,400-kilometer-long Aleutian trench that extends from the northern end of the Kamchatka trench to the Gulf of Alaska marks the boundary between the two plates.
From: Smithsonian Institution’s Global Volcanism Program’s Website, May 2000
- The great sweep of the Sunda Arc, over 3,000 kilometers from NorthWest Sumatra to the Banda Sea, results from the subduction of the Indian Ocean crust beneath the Asian Plate. This arc includes 76 percent of the region’s volcanoes, but those on either end are tectonically more complex. …
From: Brantley, 1994, Volcanoes of the United States: USGS General Interest Publication
- In the Pacific Northwest, the Juan de Fuca Plate plunges beneath the North American Plate. As the denser plate of oceanic crust is forced deep into the Earth’s interior beneath the continental plate, a process known as subduction, it encounters high temperatures and pressures that partially melt solid rock. Some of this newly formed magma rises toward the Earth’s surface to erupt, forming a chain of volcanoes (the Cascade Range) above the subduction zone.
Plate Tectonics and Volcanic Eruptions |
From: Kious and Tilling, 1996, This Dynamic Earth: The Story of Plate Tectonics: USGS Special Interest Publication
- As with earthquakes, volcanic activity is linked to plate-tectonic processes. Most of the world’s active above-sea volcanoes are located near convergent plate boundaries where subduction is occurring, particularly around the Pacific basin. However, much more volcanism — producing about three quarters of all lava erupted on Earth — takes place unseen beneath the ocean, mostly along the oceanic spreading centers, such as the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the East Pacific Rise.
- Subduction-zone volcanoes like Mount St. Helens (in Washington State) and Mount Pinatubo (Luzon, Philippines), are called composite cones and typically erupt with explosive force, because the magma is too stiff to allow easy escape of volcanic gases. As a consequence, tremendous internal pressures mount as the trapped gases expand during ascent, before the pent-up pressure is suddenly released in a violent eruption. Such an explosive process can be compared to putting your thumb over an opened bottle of a carbonated drink, shaking it vigorously, and then quickly removing the thumb. The shaking action separates the gases from the liquid to form bubbles, increasing the internal pressure. Quick release of the thumb allows the gases and liquid to gush out with explosive speed and force.
- In 1991, two volcanoes on the western edge of the Philippine Plate produced major eruptions. On June 15, Mount Pinatubo spewed ash 40 km into the air and produced huge ash flows (also called pyroclastic flows) and mudflows that devastated a large area around the volcano. Pinatubo, located 90 km from Manila, had been dormant for 600 years before the 1991 eruption, which ranks as one of the largest eruptions in this century. Also in 1991, Japan’s Unzen Volcano, located on the Island of Kyushu about 40 km east of Nagasaki, awakened from its 200-year slumber to produce a new lava dome at its summit. Beginning in June, repeated collapses of this active dome generated destructive ash flows that swept down its slopes at speeds as high as 200 km per hour. Unzen is one of more than 75 active volcanoes in Japan; its eruption in 1792 killed more than 15,000 people–the worst volcanic disaster in the country’s history.
- While the Unzen eruptions have caused deaths and considerable local damage, the impact of the June 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo was global. Slightly cooler than usual temperatures recorded worldwide and the brilliant sunsets and sunrises have been attributed to this eruption that sent fine ash and gases high into the stratosphere, forming a large volcanic cloud that drifted around the world. The sulfur dioxide (SO2) in this cloud — about 22 million tons — combined with water to form droplets of sulfuric acid, blocking some of the sunlight from reaching the Earth and thereby cooling temperatures in some regions by as much as 0.5 °C. An eruption the size of Mount Pinatubo could affect the weather for a few years. A similar phenomenon occurred in April of 1815 with the cataclysmic eruption of Tambora Volcano in Indonesia, the most powerful eruption in recorded history. Tambora’s volcanic cloud lowered global temperatures by as much as 3 °C. Even a year after the eruption, most of the northern hemisphere experienced sharply cooler temperatures during the summer months. In part of Europe and in North America, 1816 was known as “the year without a summer.”
- Apart from possibly affecting climate, volcanic clouds from explosive eruptions also pose a hazard to aviation safety. During the past two decades, more than 60 airplanes, mostly commercial jetliners, have been damaged by in-flight encounters with volcanic ash. Some of these encounters have resulted in the power loss of all engines, necessitating emergency landings. Luckily, to date no crashes have happened be-cause of jet aircraft flying into volcanic ash.
- Since the year A.D. 1600, nearly 300,000 people have been killed by volcanic eruptions. Most deaths were caused by pyroclastic flows and mudflows, deadly hazards which often accompany explosive eruptions of subduction-zone volcanoes. Pyroclastic flows, also called nuées ardentes (“glowing clouds” in French), are fast-moving, avalanche-like, ground-hugging incandescent mixtures of hot volcanic debris, ash, and gases that can travel at speeds in excess of 150 kilometers per hour. Approximately 30,000 people were killed by pyroclastic flows during the 1902 eruption of Mont Pelee on the Island of Martinique in the Caribbean. In March-April 1982, three explosive eruptions of El Chichón Volcano in the State of Chiapas, southeastern Mexico, caused the worst volcanic disaster in that country’s history. Villages within 8 km of the volcano were destroyed by pyroclastic flows, killing more than 2,000 people.
- Mudflows (also called debris flows or lahars, an Indonesian term for volcanic mudflows) are mixtures of volcanic debris and water. The water usually comes from two sources: rainfall or the melting of snow and ice by hot volcanic debris. Depending on the proportion of water to volcanic material, mudflows can range from soupy floods to thick flows that have the consistency of wet cement. As mudflows sweep down the steep sides of composite volcanoes, they have the strength and speed to flatten or bury everything in their paths. Hot ash and pyroclastic flows from the eruption of the Nevado del Ruiz Volcano in Colombia, South America, melted snow and ice atop the 5,390-m-high Andean peak; the ensuing mudflows buried the city of Armero, killing 25,000 people.
- Eruptions of Hawaiian and most other mid-plate volcanoes differ greatly from those of composite cones. Mauna Loa and Kilauea, on the island of Hawaii, are known as shield volcanoes, because they resemble the wide, rounded shape of an ancient warrior’s shield. Shield volcanoes tend to erupt non-explosively, mainly pouring out huge volumes of fluid lava. Hawaiian-type eruptions are rarely life threatening because the lava advances slowly enough to allow safe evacuation of people, but large lava flows can cause considerable economic loss by destroying property and agricultural lands. For example, lava from the ongoing eruption of Kilauea, which began in January 1983, has destroyed more than 200 structures, buried kilometers of highways, and disrupted the daily lives of local residents. Because Hawaiian volcanoes erupt frequently and pose little danger to humans, they provide an ideal natural laboratory to safely study volcanic phenomena at close range. The USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, on the rim of Kilauea, was among the world’s first modern volcano observatories, established early in this century.
- In recorded history, explosive eruptions at subduction-zone (convergent-boundary) volcanoes have posed the greatest hazard to civilizations. Yet scientists have estimated that about three quarters of the material erupted on Earth each year originates at spreading mid-ocean ridges. However, no deep submarine eruption has yet been observed “live” by scientists. Because the great water depths preclude easy observation, few detailed studies have been made of the numerous possible eruption sites along the tremendous length (50,000 km) of the global mid-oceanic ridge system. Recently however, repeated surveys of specific sites along the Juan de Fuca Ridge, off the coast of the Oregon and Washington, have mapped deposits of fresh lava, which must have been erupted sometime between the surveys. In June 1993, seismic signals typically associated with submarine eruptions — called T-phases — were detected along part of the spreading Juan de Fuca Ridge and interpreted as being caused by eruptive activity.
- Iceland, where the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is exposed on land, is a different story. It is easy to see many Icelandic volcanoes erupt non-explosively from fissure vents, in similar fashion to typical Hawaiian eruptions; others, like Hekla Volcano, erupt explosively. (After Hekla’s catastrophic eruption in 1104, it was thought in the Christian world to be the “Mouth to Hell.”) The voluminous, but mostly non-explosive, eruption at Lakagígar (Laki), Iceland, in 1783, resulted in one of the world’s worst volcanic disasters. About 9,000 people — almost 20 percent of the country’s population at the time — died of starvation after the eruption, because their livestock had perished from grazing on grass contaminated by fluorine-rich gases emitted during this eight month-long eruption.
Cascade Range Volcanoes and Plate Tectonics |
From: Swanson, et.al., 1989, Cenozoic Volcanism in the Cascade Range and Columbia Plateau, Southern Washington and Northernmost Oregon: AGU Field Trip Guidebook T106.
- The Cascade Range has been an active arc for about 36 million years as a result of plate convergence. Volcanic rocks between 55 and 42 million years ago occur in the Cascades, but are probably related to a rather diffuse volcanic episode that created the Challis arc extending southeastward from northern to northwest Wyoming. Convergence between the North American and Juan de Fuca plates continues at about 4 centimeters per year in the direction of North-50-degrees-East, a slowing of 2-3 centimeters per year since 7 million years ago. According to most interpretations, volcanism in the Cascades has been discontinuous in time and space, with the most recent episode of activity beginning about 5 million years ago and resulting in more than 3000 vents.
- In Oregon, the young terrane is commonly called the High Cascades and the old terrane the Western Cascades, terms that reflect present physiography and geography. The terms are not useful in Washington, where young vents are scattered across the dominantly middle Miocene and older terrane. …
- In Washington and Oregon, a striking contrast has existed for the past 5 million years in the style of volcanism in the Cascades relative to geography. North of Mount Rainier, young volcanism is concentrated in only a few isolated andesitic and dacitic composite cones (notably Glacier Peak, Mount Baker, and the volcanoes of the Garibaldi belt in British Columbia), whereas south of Mount Hood moderate-sized andesitic and dacitic composite cones are relatively unimportant features of a landscape dominated by small andesite and basalt vents. The area between Mounts Rainier and Hood is transitional; large andesite and dacite composite cones ( Rainier, Adams, St. Helens, Hood, and the extinct Goat Rocks volcano) occur together with fields and scattered vents of olivine basalt ( Indian Heaven, Simcoe Mountains, and the King Mountain fissure zone south of Mount Adams. …
- The southern Washington Cascades are seismically active. Most earthquakes occur along the 100-kilometer-long, north-northwest trending St. Helens seismic zone, where most focal mechanisms show dextral slip parallel to the trend of the zone and consistent with the direction of plate convergence. Other crustal earthquakes concentrate just west of Mount Rainier and in the Portland (Oregon) area. Few earthquakes occur north of Mount Rainier or south of Mount Hood.
- From tomography, Rasmussen and Humphreys (1988) interpret the subducted Juan de Fuca plate as a quasi-planar feature dipping about 65 degrees to about 300 kilometers under the southern Washington Cascades. The plate is poorly defined seismically, however, owing to a lack of earthquakes within it. Guffanti and Weaver (1988) show that the present volcanic front of the Washington Cascades, defined by the westernmost young vents, parallels the curved trend of the subducting plate reflected by the 60 kilometer-depth contour. The front trends northwest in northern Washington — where Glacier Peak, Mount Baker, and the volcanoes of southern British Columbia occur along a virtually straight line — and northeast in southern Washington. A 90-kilometer gap free of young volcanoes between Mount Rainier and Glacier Peak is landward of that part of the subducting plate with the least average dip to a depth of 60 kilometers. South of Portland, the volcanic front is offset 50 kilometers eastward and extends southward into California, probably still parallel to the trend of the convergent margin.
East Africa Rift |
From: Kious and Tilling, 1996, This Dynamic Earth: The Story of Plate Tectonics: USGS Online version 1.08
- In East Africa, spreading processes have already torn Saudi Arabia away from the rest of the African continent, forming the Red Sea. The actively splitting African Plate and the Arabian Plate meet in what geologists call a triple junction, where the Red Sea meets the Gulf of Aden. A new spreading center may be developing under Africa along the East African Rift Zone. When the continental crust stretches beyond its limits, tension cracks begin to appear on the Earth’s surface. Magma rises and squeezes through the widening cracks, sometimes to erupt and form volcanoes. The rising magma, whether or not it erupts, puts more pressure on the crust to produce additional fractures and, ultimately, the rift zone.
- East Africa may be the site of the Earth’s next major ocean. Plate interactions in the region provide scientists an opportunity to study first hand how the Atlantic may have begun to form about 200 million years ago. Geologists believe that, if spreading continues, the three plates that meet at the edge of the present-day African continent will separate completely, allowing the Indian Ocean to flood the area and making the easternmost corner of Africa (the Horn of Africa) a large island.
Hawaiian “Hot Spot” |
From: Tilling, Heliker, and Wright, 1987, Eruptions of Hawaiian Volcanoes: Past, Present, and Future: Department of the Interior/U.S. Geological Survey Publication
- The great majority of the world’s earthquakes and active volcanoes occur near the boundaries of the Earth’s shifting plates. Why then are theHawaiian volcanoes located near the middle of the Pacific Plate, more than 2,000 miles from the nearest plate boundary? In 1963, J. Tuzo Wilson, a Canadian geophysicist, provided an ingenious explanation within the framework of plate tectonics by proposing the “Hot Spot” hypothesis. Wilson’s hypothesis has come to be accepted widely, because it agrees well with much of the scientific data on the Pacific Ocean in general, and the Hawaiian Islands in particular.
- According to Wilson, the distinctive linear shape of the Hawaiian-Emperor Chain reflects the progressive movement of the Pacific Plate over a deep immobilehot spot. This hot spot partly melts the region just below the overriding Pacific Plate, producing small, isolated blobs of magma. Less dense than the surrounding solid rock, the magma rises buoyantly through structurally weak zones and ultimately erupts as lava onto the ocean floor to form volcanoes.
- Over a span of about 70 million years, the combined processes of magma formation, eruption, and continuous movement of the Pacific Plate over the stationary hot spot have left the trail of volcanoes across the ocean floor that we now call the Hawaiian-Emperor Chain. Scientists interpret the sharp bend in the chain, about 2,200 miles northwest of the Big Island, as indicating a change in the direction of plate motion that occurred about 43 million years ago, as suggested by the ages of the volcanoes bracketing the bend.
- Part of the Big Island, the southeasternmost and youngest island, presently overlies the hot spot and still taps the magma source to feed its two currently active volcanoes, Kilauea and Mauna Loa. The active submarine volcano, Loihi, off the Big Island’s south coast, may mark the beginning of the zone of magma formation at the southeastern edge of the hot spot. The other Hawaiian islands have moved northwestward beyond the hot spot, were successively cut off from the sustaining magma source, and are no longer volcanically active.
- The progressive northwesterly drift of the islands from their point of origin over the hot spot is well shown by the ages of the principal lava flows on the various Hawaiian Islands from northwest (oldest) to southeast (youngest), given in millions of years: Kauai, 5.6 to 3.8; Oahu, 3.4 to 2.2;Molokai, 1.8 to 1.3; Maui, 1.3 to 0.8; and Hawaii, less than 0.7 and still growing.
- Even on the Big Island alone, the relative ages of its five volcanoes are compatible with the hot-spot theory. Kohala, at the northwestern corner of the island, is the oldest, having ceased eruptive activity about 60,000 years ago. The second oldest is Mauna Kea, which last erupted about 3,000 years ago; next is Hualalai, which has had only one historic eruption (1800-1801), and lastly, both Mauna Loa and Kilauea have been vigorously and repeatedly active in historic times. Because it is growing on the southeastern flank of Mauna Loa, Kilauea is believed to be younger than its huge neighbor.
- The size of the Hawaiian hot spot is not know precisely, but it presumably is large enough to encompass the currently active volcanoes of Mauna Loa, Kilauea, Loihi, and, possibly, also Hualalai and Haleakala. Some scientists have estimated the Hawaiian hot spot to be about 200 miles across, with much narrower vertical passageways that feed magma to the individual volcanoes.
From: Kious and Tilling, This Dynamic Earth: The Story of Plate Tectonics: USGS Online Publication
- In 1963, J. Tuzo Wilson, the Canadian geophysicist who discovered transform faults, came up with an ingenious idea that became known as the “hotspot” theory. Wilson noted that in certain locations around the world, such as Hawaii, volcanism has been active for very long periods of time. This could only happen, he reasoned, if relatively small, long-lasting, and exceptionally hot regions — called hotspots — existed below the plates that would provide localized sources of high heat energy (thermal plumes) to sustain volcanism.
- Specifically, Wilson hypothesized that the distinctive linear shape of the Hawaiian Island-Emperor Seamounts chain resulted from the Pacific Plate moving over a deep, stationary hotspot in the mantle, located beneath the present-day position of the Island of Hawaii. Heat from this hotspot produced a persistent source of magma by partly melting the overriding Pacific Plate. The magma, which is lighter than the surrounding solid rock, then rises through the mantle and crust to erupt onto the seafloor, forming an active seamount. Over time, countless eruptions cause the seamount to grow until it finally emerges above sea level to form an island volcano. Wilson suggested that continuing plate movement eventually carries the island beyond the hotspot, cutting it off from the magma source, and volcanism ceases. As one island volcano becomes extinct, another develops over the hotspot, and the cycle is repeated. This process of volcano growth and death, over many millions of years, has left a long trail of volcanic islands and seamounts across the Pacific Ocean floor.
- According to Wilson’s hotspot theory, the volcanoes of the Hawaiian chain should get progressively older and become more eroded the farther they travel beyond the hotspot. The oldest volcanic rocks on Kauai, the northwesternmost inhabited Hawaiian island, are about 5.5 million years old and are deeply eroded. By comparison, on the “Big Island” of Hawaii — southeasternmost in the chain and presumably still positioned over the hotspot — the oldest exposed rocks are less than 0.7 million years old and new volcanic rock is continually being formed.
Iceland Volcanics and Plate Tectonics |
From: Newhall and Dzurisin, 1988, Historical Unrest at Large Calderas of the World: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1855
- The Mid-Atlantic plate boundary passes through Iceland and is reflected in two zones of spreading and volcanism — an eastern zone, the site of most historical eruptions, and a western zone.
From: Kious and Tilling, 1996, This Dynamic Earth: The Story of Plate Tectonics: USGS Special Interest Publication
- Iceland, where the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is exposed on land, is a different story. It is easy to see many Icelandic volcanoes erupt non-explosively from fissure vents, in similar fashion to typical Hawaiian eruptions; others, like Hekla Volcano, erupt explosively. (After Hekla’s catastrophic eruption in 1104, it was thought in the Christian world to be the “Mouth to Hell.”) The voluminous, but mostly non-explosive, eruption at Lakagígar (Laki), Iceland, in 1783, resulted in one of the world’s worst volcanic disasters. About 9,000 people — almost 20 percent of the country’s population at the time — died of starvation after the eruption, because their livestock had perished from grazing on grass contaminated by fluorine-rich gases emitted during this eight month-long eruption.
Juan de Fuca Ridge – Juan de Fuca Subduction |
From: Brantley, 1994, Volcanoes of the United States: USGS General Interest Publication
- … In the past 25 years, scientists have developed a theory — called plate tectonics — that explains the locations of volcanoes and their relationship to other large-scale geologic features. …
- According to this theory, the Earth’s surface is made up of a patchwork of about a dozen large plates that move relative to one another at speeds from less than one centimeter to about ten centimeters per year (about the speed at which fingernails grow). These rigid plates, whose average thickness is about 80 kilometers, are spreading apart, sliding past each other, or colliding with each other in slow motion on top of the Earth’s hot, pliable interior. Volcanoes tend to form where plates collide or spread apart, but they can also grow in the middle of a plate, as for example the Hawaiian volcanoes.
- The boundary between the Pacific and Juan de Fuca Plates is marked by a broad submarine mountain chain about 500 kilometers long, known as the Juan de Fuca Ridge. Young volcanoes, lava flows, and hot springs were discovered in a broad valley less than 8 kilometers wide along the crest of the ridge in the 1970’s. The ocean floor is spreading apart and forming new ocean crust along this valley or “rift” as hot magma from the Earth’s interior is injected into the ridge and erupted at its top.
- In the Pacific Northwest, the Juan de Fuca Plate plunges beneath the North American Plate. As the denser plate of oceanic crust is forced deep into the Earth’s interior beneath the continental plate, a process known as subduction, it encounters high temperatures and pressures that partially melt solid rock. Some of this newly formed magma rises toward the Earth’s surface to erupt, forming a chain of volcanoes (the Cascade Range) above the subduction zone.
From: Wood and Kienle, 1990, Volcanoes of North America: United States and Canada: Cambridge University Press, 354p., p.149, Contribution by Charles A. Wood and Scott Baldridge
- The remaining part of the Pacific Plate currently converging with theAmerican Northwest is the Juan de Fuca Plate, with small platelets at its northern (Explorer Plate) and southern Gorda Plate) terminations. The Explorer Plate separated from the Juan de Fuca approximately 4 million years ago and is apparently no longer being subducted (Hyndman, et.al., 1979); the Gorda split away between 18 and 5 million years ago (Riddihough, 1984). The present slow rate of convergence (3-4 centimeters per year) of the Juan de Fuca Plate is only about half its value at 7 million years (Riddihough, 1984), which probably explains the reduced seismicity, lack of a trench, and debatable decline in volcanic activity. …
- Marianas Trench
From: Kious and Tilling, 1996, This Dynamic Earth: The Story of Plate Tectonics: USGS Special Interest Publication, Online version 1.08
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As with oceanic-continental convergence, when two oceanic plates converge, one is usually subducted under the other, and in the process a trench is formed. The Marianas Trench (paralleling the Mariana Islands), for example, marks where the fast-moving Pacific Plate converges against the slower moving Philippine Plate. The Challenger Deep, at the southern end of the Marianas Trench, plunges deeper into the Earth’s interior (nearly 11,000 meters) than Mount Everest, the world’s tallest mountain, rises above sea level (about 8,854 meters).
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Subduction processes in oceanic-oceanic plate convergence also result in the formation of volcanoes. Over millions of years, the erupted lava and volcanic debris pile up on the ocean floor until a submarine volcano rises above sea level to form an island volcano. Such volcanoes are typically strung out in chains called island arcs. As the name implies, volcanic island arcs, which closely parallel the trenches, are generally curved. The trenches are the key to understanding how island arcs such as the Marianas and the Aleutian Islands have formed and why they experience numerous strong earthquakes. Magmas that form island arcs are produced by the partial melting of the descending plate and/or the overlying oceanic lithosphere. The descending plate also provides a source of stress as the two plates interact, leading to frequent moderate to strong earthquakes.
Mid-Atlantic Ridge |
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Divergent boundaries occur along spreading centers where plates are moving apart and new crust is created by magma pushing up from the mantle. Picture two giant conveyor belts, facing each other but slowly moving in opposite directions as they transport newly formed oceanic crust away from the ridge crest.
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Perhaps the best known of the divergent boundaries is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. This submerged mountain range, which extends from the Arctic Ocean to beyond the southern tip of Africa, is but one segment of the global mid-ocean ridge system that encircles the Earth. The rate of spreading along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge averages about 2.5 centimeters per year (cm/yr), or 25 km in a million years. This rate may seem slow by human standards, but because this process has been going on for millions of years, it has resulted in plate movement of thousands of kilometers. Seafloor spreading over the past 100 to 200 million years has caused the Atlantic Ocean to grow from a tiny inlet of water between the continents of Europe, Africa, and the Americas into the vast ocean that exists today.
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The volcanic country of Iceland, which straddles the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, offers scientists a natural laboratory for studying on land the processes also occurring along the submerged parts of a spreading ridge. Iceland is splitting along the spreading center between the North American and Eurasian Plates, as North America moves westward relative to Eurasia.
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The consequences of plate movement are easy to see around Krafla Volcano, in the northeastern part of Iceland. Here, existing ground cracks have widened and new ones appear every few months. From 1975 to 1984, numerous episodes of rifting (surface cracking) took place along the Krafla fissure zone. Some of these rifting events were accompanied by volcanic activity; the ground would gradually rise 1-2 m before abruptly dropping, signaling an impending eruption. Between 1975 and 1984, the displacements caused by rifting totaled about 7 m.
- Iceland, where the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is exposed on land, is a different story. It is easy to see many Icelandic volcanoes erupt non-explosively from fissure vents, in similar fashion to typical Hawaiian eruptions; others, like Hekla Volcano, erupt explosively. (After Hekla’s catastrophic eruption in 1104, it was thought in the Christian world to be the “Mouth to Hell.”) The voluminous, but mostly non-explosive, eruption at Lakagígar (Laki), Iceland, in 1783, resulted in one of the world’s worst volcanic disasters. About 9,000 people — almost 20 percent of the country’s population at the time — died of starvation after the eruption, because their livestock had perished from grazing on grass contaminated by fluorine-rich gases emitted during this eight month-long eruption.
South America, Plate Tectonics, and Volcanic Ranges |
- South America spans the greatest length of any continental volcanic region. Subduction of the eastern Pacific’s Nazca Plate beneath South America has produced one of the Earth’s highest mountain ranges, and its highest volcano Nevados Ojos del Salado (Argentina). Three distinct volcanic belts are separated by volcanically inactive gaps, where subduction is at such a shallow angle that magma is not generated by the process.
Yellowstone “Hot Spot” |
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Scientists have traced Yellowstone’s origin to a hot spot in the mantle, one of a few dozen such hot spots on Earth. Buoyant material from a hot spot rises through the upper mantle, bringing heat from the Earth’s interior closer to the surface. The Yellowstone hot spot impinges on the base of the North American plate, one of several rigid plates that make up the Earth’s crust. These plates move a few inches per year with respect to the stationary hot spots and each other, sometimes causing great earthquakes as the plates collide, grind past one another, or split apart.
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The Yellowstone hot spot has interacted with the North American plate for perhaps as long as 17 million years, causing widespread outpourings of basalt that bury about 200,000 square miles in Washington, Oregon, California, Nevada, and Idaho under stacks of lava flows half a mile or more thick. Some of the basaltic melt, or magma, produced by the hot spot accumulates near the base of the plate, where its heat melts rocks from the Earth’s lower crust. These melts, in turn, rise closer to the surface to form large reservoirs of potentially explosive rhyolite magma. Catastrophic eruptions have partly emptied some of these reservoirs, causing their roofs to collapse. The resulting craters, some of which are more than 30 miles (50 kilometers) across, are known as volcanic calderas. Because the plate was moving an inch or so per year southwestward over the hot spot for millions of years as the calderas formed, groups of calderas are strung out like beads on a string across parts of Idaho and Wyoming.
- Yellowstone lies at the intersection of the Basin and Range tectonic province, dominated by E-W extension, and the eastern Snake River Plain, a linear downwarp or graben that has been a locus for basaltic volcanism since middle Miocene time. According to one popular model, the rhyolitic Yellowstone Plateau marks the current location of a “hotspot” or melting anomaly in the upper mantle, and the basaltic Snake River Plain records the hotspot’s northeastward track across the mobile North American Plate. …
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Although Hawaii is perhaps the best known hotspot, others are thought to exist beneath the oceans and continents. More than a hundred hotspots beneath the Earth’s crust have been active during the past 10 million years. Most of these are located under plate interiors (for example, the African Plate), but some occur near diverging plate boundaries. Some are concentrated near the mid-oceanic ridge system, such as beneath Iceland, the Azores, and the Galapagos Islands.
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A few hotspots are thought to exist below the North American Plate. Perhaps the best known is the hotspot presumed to exist under the continental crust in the region of Yellowstone National Park in northwestern Wyoming. Here are several calderas (large craters formed by the ground collapse accompanying explosive volcanism) that were produced by three gigantic eruptions during the past two million years, the most recent of which occurred about 600,000 years ago. Ash deposits from these powerful eruptions have been mapped as far away as Iowa, Missouri, Texas, and even northern Mexico. The thermal energy of the presumed Yellowstone hotspot fuels more than 10,000 hot pools and springs, geysers (like Old Faithful), and bubbling mudpots (pools of boiling mud). A large body of magma, capped by a hydrothermal system (a zone of pressurized steam and hot water), still exists beneath the caldera. Recent surveys demonstrate that parts of the Yellowstone region rise and fall by as much as 1 cm each year, indicating the area is still geologically restless. However, these measurable ground movements, which most likely reflect hydrothermal pressure changes, do not necessarily signal renewed volcanic activity in the area.
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If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
05/13/03, Lyn Topinka.
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Submarine Volcanoes, Ridges, and Vents — Seamounts … Submarine Eruptions … Submarine Mountain Chains … Submarine Peaks … Submarine Ridges … Submarine Trenches … Submarine Vents … Submarine Volcanoes … Volcanic Vents … Axial Seamount, Juan De Fuca Ridge … Japan … Kavachi, Solomon Islands … Kick ‘Em Jenny, West Indies … Loihi Seamount, Hawaii … Marianas Trench … Ruby Seamount, North Pacific … Surtsey, Iceland … White Island, New Zealand …
- Items of Interest
- Axial Seamount – Juan de Fuca Ridge Menu
- Axial Seamount – Map — [Map,11K,InlineGIF] — showing features of Pacific/Juan de Fuca/North American subduction system relative to Western United States. Open blue arrows, ridge-spreading directions; solid blue arrow, convergence direction.— Modified from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, IGC Field Trip T106: Cenozoic Volcanism in the Cascade Range and Columbia Plateau, Southern Washington and Northernmost Oregon, p.2
- Different Volcano Types – Menu
- Gorda Ridge, Juan de Fuca Ridge – Menu — Washington-Oregon-California coast
- Japan Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — largest number of submarine volcanoes, mostly extending down the Izu-Marianas arc, and the largest number of reported submarine eruptions
- Juan de Fuca Volcanics – Description — Axial Seamount … Cascade Range … Cascadia Subduction Zone … Explorer Plate … Gorda Plate … Gorda Ridge … Juan de Fuca Plate … Juan de Fuca Ridge … Juan de Fuca Subduction … North American Plate … Pacific Plate … Plate Tectonics …
- Juan de Fuca Volcanics – Map — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]— Modified from: Brantley, 1994
- Juan de Fuca Volcanics – Menu
- Kavachi – Map— [Map,11K,InlineGIF]
- Kavachi – Solomon Islands Menu
- Kick ‘Em Jenny – Map— [Map,11K,InlineGIF]
- Kick ‘Em Jenny – West Indies Menu
- Map, Juan de Fuca Ridge – Gorda Ridge – Axial Seamount — [Map,11K,InlineGIF] — showing features of Pacific/Juan de Fuca/North American subduction system relative to Western United States. Open blue arrows, ridge-spreading directions; solid blue arrow, convergence direction.— Modified from: Swanson, et.al., 1989, IGC Field Trip T106: Cenozoic Volcanism in the Cascade Range and Columbia Plateau, Southern Washington and Northernmost Oregon, p.2
- Map, Juan de Fuca Subduction – Juan de Fuca Ridge – Cascade Range — [Map,20K,InlineGIF]— Modified from: Brantley, 1994
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URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/SubmarineVolcano/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
05/13/03, Lyn Topinka
Supervolcano
VEI 8 eruptions have happened in the following locations.
- Lake Taupo, Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand – Oruanui eruption ~26,500 years ago (~1,170 km³)
- Lake Toba, Sumatra, Indonesia – ~74,000 years ago (~2,800 km³)
- Whakamaru, Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand – Whakamaru Ignimbrite/Mount Curl Tephra ~254,000 years ago (1,200-2,000 km³)
- Yellowstone Caldera, Lava Creek Tuff, Wyoming, United States, Yellowstone hotspot – 640,000 years ago (1,000 km³)
- Island Park Caldera, Huckleberry Ridge Tuff, Idaho/Wyoming, United States, Yellowstone hotspot – 2.1 million years ago (2,500 km³)
- Cerro Galan, Catamarca Province, Argentina – 2.5 million years ago (1,050 km³)
- Atana Ignimbrite, Pacana Caldera, northern Chile – 4 million years ago (2,500 km³)
- Heise volcanic field, Kilgore Tuff, Idaho, United States, Yellowstone hotspot – 4.5 million years ago (1,800 km³).
- Heise volcanic field, Blacktail Tuff, Idaho, United States, Yellowstone hotspot – 6.6 million years ago (1,500 km³).
- La Garita Caldera, Colorado, United States – Source of the enormous eruption of the Fish Canyon Tuff ~27.8 million years ago (~5,000 km³)
The Lake Toba eruption plunged the Earth into a volcanic winter, eradicating an estimated 60%of the human population (although humans managed to survive, even in the vicinity of the volcano). However the coincidental agreement in above sources about percentage value of extinction is contrary to differing estimates of human population size at that time.
VEI-7 volcanic events, less colossal but still supermassive, have occurred in the geological past. The only ones in historic times are Tambora, in 1815, Lake Taupo (Hatepe), around 180 CE, and possibly Baekdu Mountain, 969 CE (± 20 years).
- Tambora, Sumbawa Island, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia – 1815 (160 km³), the following year 1816 became known as the “Year Without a Summer“
- Baekdu Mountain, China/North Korea – ~969 CE (96±19 km³)
- Lake Taupo, Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand – Hatepe eruption ~181 CE (120 km³)
- Kikai Caldera, Ryukyu Islands, Japan – ~6,300 years ago (~ 4,300 BCE) (150 km³)
- Macauley Island, Kermadec Islands, New Zealand – ~6,300 years ago (~ 4,300 BCE) (100 km³)
- Aira Caldera, Kyūshū, Japan – ~22,000 years ago (~110 km³)
- Rotoiti Ignimbrite, Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand – ~50,000 years ago (~240 km³)
- Campi Flegrei, Naples, Italy – 39,280 ± 110 years ago (500 km³)
- Aso, Kyūshū, Japan – four large explosive eruptions between 300,000 to 80,000 years ago (last one > 600 km³)
- Reporoa Caldera, Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand – 230,000 years ago (~100 km³)* I. A. Nairn; C. P. Wood and R. A. Bailey (December 1994). “The Reporoa Caldera, Taupo Volcanic Zone: source of the Kaingaroa Ignimbrites”. Bulletin of Volcanology 56 (6): 529–537. doi:10.1007/BF00302833. http://www.springerlink.com/content/mu1970l8163tp006. Retrieved 2010-09-16.
- Mamaku Ignimbrite, Rotorua Caldera,Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand – 240,000 years ago (>280 km³)
- Matahina Ignimbrite, Haroharo Caldera, Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand – 280,000 years ago (~120 km³)
- Long Valley Caldera, Bishop Tuff, California, United States – ~760,000 years ago (600 km³)
- Valles Caldera, New Mexico, United States – ~1.15 million years ago (~600 km³)
- Mangakino, Taupo Volcanic Zone, North Island, New Zealand – three eruptions from 0.97 to 1.23 million years ago (each > 300 km³)
- Henry’s Fork Caldera, Mesa Falls Tuff, Idaho, United States, Yellowstone hotspot – 1.3 million years ago (280 km³)
- Pastos Grandes Ignimbrite, Pastos Grandes Caldera, 2.9 million years ago (>820 km³)
- Heise volcanic field, Walcott Tuff, Idaho, United States, Yellowstone hotspot – 6.4 million years ago (750 km³).
- Bruneau-Jarbidge, Idaho, United States, Yellowstone hotspot – ~10-12 million years ago (>250 km³) (responsible for the Ashfall Fossil Beds ~1,600 km to the east)
- Bennett Lake Volcanic Complex, British Columbia/Yukon, Canada – ~50 million years ago (850 km³)
- News and Current Events
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- Information Statement, April 11, 2007
- Current Activity
- Link to: Current Seismicity — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
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Link to: Continuous GPS monitoring at the Three Sisters Volcano in central Oregon — Link courtesy USGS Menlo Park
- Cascade Range Current Activity Update — includes the Three Sisters
- Three Sisters Current Activity Information and Archives
- Background and Information
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DESCRIPTION: Three Sisters Volcanoes — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — includes Broken Top … Cayuse Crater … Collier Glacier … Eruptive History … “Faith”, “Hope”, and “Charity” … High Cascades … Le Conte Crater … Middle Sister … North Sister … Rock Mesa … Shevlin Park Tuff … South Sister … Three Sisters … Volcanic Background … Volcano Monitoring …
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Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in Oregon — Excerpt from: Wright and Pierson, 1992, USGS Circular 1073, includes South Sister
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- Cascades Eruptions During the Past 4000 Years – Graphic — [Graphic,70K,InlineGIF] — includes South Sister
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Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about the Cascade Range Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including the Three Sisters
- Central Oregon High Cascades – Description
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Central Oregon High Cascades – Menu — general information on Oregon’s “High Cascades” Volcanoes, including the Three Sisters
- Collier Glacier, Middle Sister – Description
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Link to: Continuous GPS monitoring at the Three Sisters Volcano in central Oregon — Link courtesy USGS Menlo Park
- Current Activity Information and Archives
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Current Seismicity – Link [04/04] — Link courtesy University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
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Debris Flows from Failures of Neoglacial-Age Moraine Dams in the Three Sisters and Mount Jefferson Wilderness Areas, Oregon — O’Conner, et.al., 2001, USGS Professional Paper 1606.
- Dee Wright Observatory — view the Three Sisters from the roof
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Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project, including the monitoring of South Sister
- Earthquakes and Seismicity – Menu
- Eruptive History – Menu — Three Sisters Eruptive History Menu
- Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Scott, et.al., 2001
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Eruptive History of Three Sisters region during past 15,000 years – Graphic — [Graphic,18K,InlineGIF] — Modified from: Scott, et.al., 2001, USGS Open-File Report 99-237
- “Faith”, “Hope”, and “Charity”
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Field Trip Guide to the Central Oregon High Cascades — Scott and Garnder, 1990, Oregon Geology, v.52, n.5 and n.6 — includes Three Sisters Region
- Geographic Setting
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Geologic Map of Upper Eocene to Holocene Volcanic and Related Rocks of the Cascade Range, Oregon — Sherrod and Smith, 2000, I-2569
- Glaciers and Glaciations – Description
- Hazards – Menu — Three Sisters Volcano and Hydrologic Hazards Menu
- Hazards Report and Map — Current 1999
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Holocene Rhyodacite Eruptions on the Flanks of South Sister Volcano, Oregon — Scott, W.E., 1987, IN: Fink, J.H., (ed.), 1987, GSA Special Paper 212
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Ice Volumes on Cascade Volcanoes; Mount Rainier, Mount Hood, Three Sisters, and Mount Shasta — Driedger and Kennard, 1986, PP 1365
- Information Statement, April 11, 2007
- Information Statement, December 14, 2005
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Information — Cascade Range Current Update, September 13, 2005 — includes South Sister Field Work Information
- Information Statement, March 24, 2004
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- Information Statement, September 12, 2001
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- InSAR Monitoring – West Uplift – Menu
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Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields – Description — general information about Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields, including the Three Sisters – Mount Bachelor Region
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Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields – Menu — general information about Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields, including the Three Sisters – Mount Bachelor Region
- Maps and Graphics – Three Sisters
- Maps and Graphics – Oregon
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Measurements of slope distances and zenith angles at Newberry and South Sister Volcanoes, Oregon, 1985-1986 — Iwatsubo, Topinka, and Swanson, 1988, USGS Open-File Report 88-377
- Monitoring – Menu — Three Sisters Monitoring Menu
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Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information about Oregon Volcanoes and Volcanic Activity, including the Three Sisters
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Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network — includes Maps, and link to the University of Washington’s Geophysics Program
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Precise level lines at Crater Lake, Newberry Crater, and South Sister, Oregon — Yamashita and Doukas, 1987, USGS Open-File Report 87-293
- Publications and Reports – Three Sisters
- Seismicity – Menu
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South Sister Volcano: A Network of Short Traverses to Determine Tilt Changes — Excerpt from: Dzurisin, 1992, Geodetic Leveling as a Tool for Studying Restless Volcanoes: IN: USGS Bulletin 1966
- Three Sisters Eruptive History — Excerpt from: Scott, et.al., 2001
- Three Sisters Volcanoes – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Three Sisters Volcanoes – Visit A Volcano — includes information, maps, links, etc.
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Volcanic Fields and Mafic Volcanoes – Description — general information about Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields, including the Three Sisters – Mount Bachelor Region
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Volcanic Fields and Mafic Volcanoes – Menu — general information about Mafic Volcanoes and Volcanic Fields, including the Three Sisters – Mount Bachelor Region
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Volcano Deformation Project – CVO Project Menu — general information about the Volcano Deformation Project, including the monitoring of South Sister
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Volcano Hazards in the Three Sisters Region, Oregon — Scott, Iverson, Schilling, and Fischer, 2001, USGS Open-File Report 99-437
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- Useful Links
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URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Sisters/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
05/21/07, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
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- Active and Potentially Active Volcanoes in the United States
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- Special Items of Interest
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URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/WesternUSA/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
10/28/08, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
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DESCRIPTION: Volcanic Gases and Emissions, Fumaroles and Solfataras — Dissolved Gases … Fumaroles … Fumarole Field … Fumarolic Activity … Fume … Gases … Solfataras … Volcanic Gases … Mount St. Helens … Mount Baker … Mount Hood …
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DESCRIPTION: Hydrothermal Areas and Activity — Fumaroles … Geothermal Activity … Geysers … Hot Springs … Hydrothermal Activity … Hydrothermal Alteration … Hydrothermal Areas … Mudpots … Solfataras … Thermal Areas … Thermal Springs …
- DESCRIPTION: Volcanic Lakes and Gas Release
- DESCRIPTION: Mount St. Helens Volcanic Gases
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- Baker (Mount Baker), Washington – Menu — Thermal Activity, 1975
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Compilation of Sulfur Dioxide and Carbon Dioxide Emission-Rate Data from Mount St. Helens During 1980-88 — McGee and Casadevall, 1994, USGS Open-File Report 94-212
- COSPEC Measurements – Description
- Gas analysis of Mt. Hood fumaroles, Oregon — Nehring, et.al., USGS OFR81-236
- Geothermal and Hydrothermal Activity – Menu
- Hazards: Volcanic Gases — Excerpt from: Hoblitt, et.al., 1987, USGS Open File 87-297
- Hydrothermal Areas and Activity – Description
- Hydrothermal Areas and Activity – Menu
- Invisible CO2 Gas Killing Trees at Mammoth Mountain, California — Sorey, et.al., 1996, USGS Fact Sheet 172-96
- Lake Monoun, Cameroon, West Africa — CO2 release, August, 1984
- Lake Nyos, Cameroon, West Africa — CO2 release, August, 1986
- Monitoring Techniques – Gases and Plumes
- Mount St. Helens Volcanic Gases – Description
- CVO Photo Archives – Monitoring Images, 1980-2004 — includes Gas Sampling
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- Publications and Reports – Volcanic Emissions
- St. Helens (Mount St. Helens), Washington, Volcanic Gases – Description
- St. Helens (Mount St. Helens), Washington, Volcanic Gases – Menu
- Volcanic Emissions and Global Change Project – Menu
- Volcanic Gas — McGee and Gerlach, 1995, USGS Open-File Report 95-85
- Volcanic Gases and Emissions, Fumaroles and Solfataras – Description
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URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/Emissions/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
05/21/07, Lyn Topinka
- Background and Information
- DESCRIPTION: Yellowstone Caldera — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History — Caldera … Eruptive History … Hydrothermal Systems … “Hot Spot” … Plateau … Snake River Plain … Supervolcano … Volcanic Province …
- Special Items of Interest
- VOLCANO HAZARDS FACT SHEET: Yellowstone: Restless Volcanic Giant
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- Items of Interest
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- Geographic Setting
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- GPS Monitoring – Yellowstone – CVO Project Menu
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- Hazards Fact Sheet: Yellowstone: Restless Volcanic Giant — 1995
- Historical Unrest at Large Calderas of the World— includes Yellowstone Caldera — Newhall and Dzurisin, 1988, USGS Bulletin 1855
- “Hot Spot” (Yellowstone’s “Hot Spot”) – Description
- Leveling Project – Yellowstone – CVO Project Menu
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- Western USA Volcanoes and Volcanics – Description — brief description about how the west was formed
- Western USA Volcanoes and Volcanics – Menu — general information on Volcanoes of the Western USA
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- Yellowstone Caldera – Description — Geographic Setting, Geologic and Eruptive History
- Yellowstone Caldera – Visit A Volcano — includes information, maps, links, etc.
- Yellowstone Eruptive History
- Yellowstone “Hot Spot” – Description
- Yellowstone National Park – Visit A Volcano — includes information, maps, links, etc.
- Yellowstone: Restless Volcanic Giant — USGS Fact Sheet
- YVO – Yellowstone Volcano Observatory Website — Link to YVO
- Useful Links
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- Western USA Volcanoes and Volcanics Menu — CVO Menu
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URL for this page is: <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Yellowstone/framework.html>
If you have questions or comments please contact: <GS-CVO-WEB@usgs.gov>
06/24/09, Lyn Topinka