Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Mount St. Helens' Videos

Videos about Mount St. Helens.

Mount St. Helens: May 18, 1980 

Video Transcript
Mount St. Helens: May 18, 1980 (duration 7:30 minutes) – A narrative of the cataclysmic eruption.

Mount St. Helens: A Catalyst for Change 

Video Transcript
Mount St. Helens: A Catalyst for Change (duration 6:47 minutes) – Changes to volcano science and monitoring as a result of the 1980 eruption.

Mount St. Helens 1980 Ash Cloud as Seen From Space 

Mount St. Helens 1980 Ash Cloud as Seen From Space (duration 0:18 minutes) – A compilation of NOAA satellite images after the 1980 eruption.

Mount St. Helens Runaway Glacier: A time-lapse video fo Crater Glacier 

Mount St. Helens Runaway Glacier: A time-lapse video fo Crater Glacier (duration 2:12 minutes) – A 2005-2010 time-lapse photograph sequence of dome growth and glacial advance in the Mount St. Helens Crater.

Time-lapse images of Mount St. Helens dome growth 2004-2008 

Time-lapse images of Mount St. Helens dome growth 2004-2008 (duration 1:26 minutes) – The rapid onset of unrest at Mount St. Helens on September 23, 2004 initiated an uninterrupted lava-dome-building eruption that continued until 2008. As shown in the video, recorded from Sugar Bowl on the edge of the Mount St. Helens' crater, an initial succession of lava spines, two recumbent and one steeply sloping, grew to nearly 500 m (1640 ft) in length before disintegrating into mounds of rubble. The trajectory of lava extrusion was affected by the geometry of the crater, particularly the proximity of the vent to the south crater wall, and by the growing volume of erupted material.

Time-series of dome and glacier growth at Mount St. Helens, Washington, 2004-2012 

Time-series of dome and glacier growth at Mount St. Helens, Washington, 2004-2012 (duration 0:20 minutes) – Time-lapse changes in the lava dome and Crater Glacier from 2004- 2012. Sequence created from 1:12,000 scale vertical aerial photographs combined with ground control points from GPS measurement locations. Software was used to collect a 3-D point cloud and combined to make a digital elevation model. Information regarding volume and rates of growth of the lava dome and glacier are extracted from DEMs to monitor surface changes in the crater.