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An aeromagnetic study of Mount St. Helens

September 10, 1987

Aeromagnetic data from surveys flown by the U.S. Geological Survey over Mount St. Helens, Washington, before and after the climactic May 18, 1980, eruption were used to determine the bulk magnetic properties of the volcano and to delineate a buried source. We assumed that most of the edifice of preeruption and posteruption Mount St. Helens has a magnetization direction near the present earth's field of 69° inclination and 20° declination and calculated its intensity as 4.1 A/m. After subtraction of magnetic anomalies due to topogaphy magnetized with this direction and intensity, the preeruption and posteruption surveys revealed nearly identical residual magnetic highs and lows, indicative that their sources were not altered or removed by the May 1980 eruption. The residual highs were explained by a 200-m-deep source lying mostly within the edifice of Mount St. Helens. The source could be terrain that predates Mount St. Helens, such as a buried ridge or a cone or a valley filled with lava. We calculated the magnetization of the material removed by the May 1980 eruption and found its intensity to be 4.2 A/m in a direction near the present earth's field, similar to that assumed for the volcano as a whole. This similar result confirmed the validity of the magnetization vector assumed for the entire edifice.

Publication Year 1987
Title An aeromagnetic study of Mount St. Helens
DOI 10.1029/JB092iB10p10194
Authors Carol A. Finn, David L. Williams
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth
Index ID 70248019
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse