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Eruption-triggered avalanche, flood, and lahar at Mount St. Helens - Effects of winter snowpack

An explosive eruption of Mount St. Helens on 19 March 1982 had substantial impact beyond the vent because hot eruption products interacted with a thick snowpack. A blast of hot pumice, dome rocks, and gas dislodged crater-wall snow that avalanched through the crater and down the north flank. Snow in the crater swiftly melted to form a transient lake, from which a destructive flood and lahar swept
Authors
R. B. Waitt, T. C. Pierson, N. S. MacLeod, R. J. Janda, B. Voight, R. T. Holcomb

Time-predictable bimodal volcanism in the Coso Range, California

The bimodal Pleistocene part of the Coso volcanic field has erupted rhyolite and basalt at constant long-term rates during the past ∼0.5 m.y. Both basalt and high-silica rhyolite were erupted in several independent, geologically brief episodes. The interval between eruptions of rhyolite was proportional to the volume of the preceding eruption. Basaltic eruptions appear to have followed a similar p
Authors
Charles R. Bacon

Cenozoic silicoflagellates from offshore Guatemala, Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 495

Diverse lower Miocene to Pleistocene silicoflagellate assemblages occur at Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 495, but many samples are dominated by one or two taxa. Low-latitude zonation can be applied throughout. Cool-indicating Distephanus speculum s. ampl. is only abundant in the upper Miocene; however, relative paleotemperature values (Ts) suggest temperature extremes in the lower Miocene similar
Authors
David Bukry

Diverse basalt types from Loihi seamount, Hawaii

Loihi seamount is the southeasternmost active volcano in the Hawaiian-Emperor volcanic chain. The seamount is considered representative of the early phase of Hawaiian volcanism because of its youth, small size, and location near the melting anomaly. Seventeen dredge stations recovered transitional basalt, alkalic basalt, and basanite, in addition to the expected tholeiitic basalt. Four flows of al
Authors
James G. Moore, D. A. Clague, W. R. Normark

Geothermal systems of the Cascade Range

In the central and southern Cascade Range, plate convergence is oblique, and Quaternary volcanism produces mostly basalt and mafic andesite; large andesite-dacite composite volcanoes and silicic dome fields occur in restricted areas of long-lived igneous activity. To the north, plate convergence is normal, producing widely spaced centers in which mafic lavas are minor. Most Cascade volcanoes are s
Authors
L.J. Muffler, Charles R. Bacon, W. A. Duffield

Tilt measurements at Long Valley caldera, California, May-August 1982

The Mammoth Lakes area in east-central California has experienced unusual seismicity and ground deformation since 1978, highlighted by four M>6 earthquakes in May 1980 and by the discovery soon thereafter of a broad uplift within Long Valley caldera. Recurrent seismic swarms during June 1980-May 1982 raised concern over the possibility of renewed volcanic activity in the foreseeable future, prompt
Authors
Daniel Dzurisin, K. V. Cashman, D. A. Johnston, Arthur G. Sylvester

Chemistry and isotope ratios of sulfur in basalts and volcanic gases at Kilauea volcano, Hawaii

Eighteen basalts and some volcanic gases from the submarine and subaerial parts of Kilauea volcano were analyzed for the concentration and isotope ratios of sulfur. By means of a newly developed technique, sulfide and sulfate sulfur in the basalts were separately but simultaneously determined. The submarine basalt has 700 ± 100 ppm total sulfur with δ34SΣs of ‰0.7 ± 0.1 ‰. The sulfate/sulfide mola
Authors
H. Sakai, T. J. Casadevall, J. G. Moore

Age of the Coso Formation, Inyo County, California

No abstract available.
Authors
Charles R. Bacon, D.M. Giovannetti, W. A. Duffield, G. B. Dalrymple, Robert E. Drake