A new study explains why even gas-rich, supposedly explosive volcanoes sometimes erupt quietly instead of blowing apart.
It was a quiet Sunday morning, at 8:32 a.m., 38 years ago when Mount St. Helens blew its top, sending tons of ash into the sky. The volcano had been quiet since the 1850s, but in 1980, geologists were ...
May 18 marks the 45th anniversary of the catastrophic eruption of Mount St. Helens in southwestern Washington. The blast in 1980 killed dozens of people and reshaped the volcanic peak in the Cascade ...
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Some Volcanoes Don't Explode When Erupting — A Hidden Force Helps Pressure to Escape
Learn how stress inside a volcano can make gas bubbles form early, helping explain why some eruptions stay quiet instead of ...
What is that coming out of Mount St. Helens? Is it ash? The National Weather Service (NWS) in Portland assured everyone that although ash is circulating, the mountain is not erupting. Strong winds ...
Scientists have uncovered a long-missing piece of the volcanic puzzle: rising magma doesn’t just form explosive gas bubbles ...
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