Dormant west coast volcanoes have explosive potential

B00Mer

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Dormant west coast volcanoes have explosive potential



A volcanic eruption in southern Chile has forced the evacuation of more than 4,000 people. It was yet another reminder of the volatility and swiftness of a volcanic explosion.

"I'm surprised, but not that it caught us off guard," Glyn Williams-Jones told CBC's On the Coast. Williams-Jones, a professor at SFU and a volcanologist, says volcanoes are known for their ability to catch people by surprise.

He says it's never certain which dormant volcano may be the next big one, including those here on the West Coast.

1. Mount Baker

On a clear day, the towering, snow-capped image of Mount Baker can been seen from Vancouver.

Although it sits south of the border in Washington State, Williams-Jones says it's the one potential volcano that would affect the greatest population.

"In terms of risk, it would be from mudslides," he said. "

You can see all that snow and ice at the summit, so if you melt that, you can very rapidly have large mudflows and rivers. If you have even stronger activity you can potentially even have ash affect the Vancouver airport."

Despite the threat, Williams-Jones says the mountain is being well monitored by the U.S. Geological Service and that it hasn't shown any great activity since the 1970s.

2. Mount Meager

Located in the Coast Mountains of southwestern British Columbia near Pemberton, the dormant Mount Meager is considered a complex volcano.

"It's definitely the largest recent volcanic eruption in Canada. That was exemplified by an eruption about 2,500 years ago," says Williams-Jones. He says during that explosion ash carried as far as Alberta.

3. Tseax Cone

Located northwest of Terrace, B.C., the Tseax Cone is Canada's youngest volcanic eruption. The explosion is believed to have occurred sometime between 1750 and 1775.

"It was a lava flow rather than a big explosion. It is also responsible for Canada's second largest natural disaster with about 2,000 people being killed."

Williams-Jones says it's not certain exactly how the volcano killed the population, although there's mention of the possibility of poison smoke or volcanic gas being emitted from the ground.

4. Mount Edziza

In Williams-Jones' words, this potentially "beast" of a volcano is located in northwestern B.C. in Stikine country. Mount Edziza is an example of subglacial volcanism, a volcano that grows under the ice.

The volcanic system remains dormant, but because it's quite far north in a less populated region, it is not as well monitored as others.

Risk of major explosion possible but unlikely

Glyn William-Jones says while an explosion is theoretically possible from any of the volcanic systems, anything happening in the near future is unlikely. Despite that, the possibility of volcanic action still exists.

"Whenever you see these kinds of events, they can go from zero to sixty in a short amount of time. As we've seen in Calbuco, there was very little warning and all of a sudden it was erupting."

"Just because we don't have anything currently bubbling over, isn't to say that sometime in the future we might not have something."

source: Dormant west coast volcanoes have explosive potential - British Columbia - CBC News
 

Curious Cdn

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I know one in the interior of B.C. glooming over Salmon Arm ... Mount Ida. She is still active. There are hot springs, there (and all over the interior of B.C.). If you get way back from the town, look at Ida, which is a classically shaped volcano , then look again at the terrain that the town is built on, you can see that Salmon Arm is built on an old pyroclastic flow. It's a long way from Pompey, but ...
 

Johnnny

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4. Mount Edziza

In Williams-Jones' words, this potentially "beast" of a volcano is located in northwestern B.C. in Stikine country. Mount Edziza is an example of subglacial volcanism, a volcano that grows under the ice.

The volcanic system remains dormant, but because it's quite far north in a less populated region, it is not as well monitored as others.

Risk of major explosion possible but unlikely

Glyn William-Jones says while an explosion is theoretically possible from any of the volcanic systems, anything happening in the near future is unlikely. Despite that, the possibility of volcanic action still exists.

"Whenever you see these kinds of events, they can go from zero to sixty in a short amount of time. As we've seen in Calbuco, there was very little warning and all of a sudden it was erupting."

"Just because we don't have anything currently bubbling over, isn't to say that sometime in the future we might not have something."

When i flew over Edziza like 4 or 5 years ago, a fumarole on the east side was smoking like it was hot
 

pgs

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When i flew over Edziza like 4 or 5 years ago, a fumarole on the east side was smoking like it was hot
Mount Baker Spews , smoke and ash every year just not in great quantities . It is due for another eruption any time within the next couple of hundred years . To bad I will probably miss it as it should be much more exciting then Mt.St.Helens . And that was awesome .
 

gopher

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I well remember the National Geographic edition where they had many photos of Mt St Helen's. Amazing that anyone can survive the onslaught of smoke and ash.
 

B00Mer

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Mount Baker Spews , smoke and ash every year just not in great quantities . It is due for another eruption any time within the next couple of hundred years . To bad I will probably miss it as it should be much more exciting then Mt.St.Helens . And that was awesome .

I used to live in Langley, BC. has a fair view of Mt. Baker from my apartment.

 

MHz

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Is this an example of how Scientists do their research, if so it would explain why we know what we know about the place we are living on. Or is it a Sheeple training program, if so it seems to be quite effective. Know what I mean?

Pop quiz question. How many lake in northern Canada would likely be caused by being the first round of sink-hole that the earth experienced. In round 2 the lakes would be getting deeper rather than filling up with silt and dust and other things?

Start at 8:00 and explain why the plates don't move just as pictured. If there is spreading and growth that does not mean there are areas where there is a downward pull on the crust and way back the north was the crust and the thinnest part so it got a lot of sinkholes rather than impacts.
If looking at impacts why not use the moon as the source after it got locked in tidal lock it's iron core migrated to the side that is closest to the earth and when it formed a volcano it was heavy metals coming out and going to earth rather than falling back to the earth. Would that dumping of the metals not allow the moon to avoid a crash as it's orbital speed was fast enough that being lighter it was able to start moving away rather than it being the hard crash promoted. The dividing line would be the earth and moon being twins and the earth was slightly bigger when the comets that are the water came past it was the bigger gravity that pulled that weight onto just the earth and that started the pull on the moon's core.
Who wouldn't want a volcano that spews pure gold?

 
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Kreskin

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I remember when Mt St Helens erupted. My dad and I were just starting to watch an NFL game when everything in our place shook and rattled. We thought a vehicle hit the building.
 

pgs

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I remember when Mt St Helens erupted. My dad and I were just starting to watch an NFL game when everything in our place shook and rattled. We thought a vehicle hit the building.
NFL on a Saturday in spring ?
 

Curious Cdn

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Imagine the damage they'll do to the atmosphere when they erupt.
There have been eruptions in the historic past that have prevented summer from arriving in the Northern hemisphere. On this overloaded Earth of 7 billion plus , who are already being sustained by artificial means (mostly petroleum based fertilizers, pesticides and mechanical farming methods ... we practically eat petroleum) an eruption like that COULD result in the starvation death of a billion plus people. China is very vulnerable. One yer without crops and they are seriously screwed. Canadians would muddle through one of those events, probably but China? ... sub-Saharan Africa?

It's happened in our past and it's only a matter of time before we have another Santorini sized or Krakatoa sized eruption. Yellowstone? 2-3 billion, maybe? That would affect us like a little asteroid hit.
 

pgs

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There have been eruptions in the historic past that have prevented summer from arriving in the Northern hemisphere. On this overloaded Earth of 7 billion plus , who are already being sustained by artificial means (mostly petroleum based fertilizers, pesticides and mechanical farming methods ... we practically eat petroleum) an eruption like that COULD result in the starvation death of a billion plus people. China is very vulnerable. One yer without crops and they are seriously screwed. Canadians would muddle through one of those events, probably but China? ... sub-Saharan Africa?

It's happened in our past and it's only a matter of time before we have another Santorini sized or Krakatoa sized eruption. Yellowstone? 2-3 billion, maybe? That would affect us like a little asteroid hit.
Maybe we should spend all our money to prevent it from maybe happening .
 

Curious Cdn

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Maybe we should spend all our money to prevent it from maybe happening .
Maybe, you have to realize that we are subject to the capriciousness of natural forces that are far larger than we can defeat or somehow prevent by throwing money at them.

News flash: You are going to die.