2000
DOI: 10.3133/fs03600
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Mount St. Helens - From the 1980 eruption to 2000

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Cited by 22 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Helens involved a series of intermittent slow dome-building and short dome-explosion events following the initial major eruption episode (Brantley and Myers, 2000). Analysis of reported data on the eruption volume during this 5-6 year period suggests a slow exponential decay of the time-averaged eruption rate (figure 6c).…”
Section: Effect Of Compressibility On the Mass Of Magma Eruptedmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Helens involved a series of intermittent slow dome-building and short dome-explosion events following the initial major eruption episode (Brantley and Myers, 2000). Analysis of reported data on the eruption volume during this 5-6 year period suggests a slow exponential decay of the time-averaged eruption rate (figure 6c).…”
Section: Effect Of Compressibility On the Mass Of Magma Eruptedmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The May 18, 1980, eruption was followed by five smaller explosive eruptions during the remainder of 1980 and by episodic growth of a lava dome that ended in October 1986 (Swanson et al, 1987;Swanson and Holcomb, 1990;Brantley and Myers, 2000). Dome growth was accompanied by hundreds of small explosive events, some of which sent ash to heights of several kilometers above the volcano, showered the crater floor with rocks, and generated small lahars.…”
Section: Mount St Helens 2004-2008: Questions Old and Newmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The reawakening of Mount St. Helens, Washington, in 1980 after more than a century of inactivity was correctly forecast a few years in advance based on the volcano's stratigraphic record of past eruptive activity [ Crandell et al ., 1975; Crandell and Mullineaux , 1978]. Starting with the recognition of unusual seismicity beneath Mount St. Helens on 20 March 1980, an intensive monitoring effort revealed patterns of earthquakes, ground deformation, and volcanic gas emissions that prompted public access restrictions and provided the basis for increasingly specific and accurate predictions of six explosive eruptions in 1980 and more than a dozen dome‐building episodes during 1980–1986 [ Swanson et al ., 1983; Brantley and Myers , 2000].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%