Ash/Tephra Fall
Ash/Tephra Fall
Filter Total Items: 5
Volcanic Hazards at Mount Rainier
Because of its elevation (4,392 m), relief, hydrothermal alteration, icecap, glacier-fed radial valleys, and proximity to encroaching suburbs of the Seattle-Tacoma metropolis, Mount Rainier is the most threatening volcano in the Cascades. Its next eruption could produce volcanic ash, lava flows, and avalanches of intensely hot rock and volcanic gases, called pyroclastic flows.
Geology and History Summary for Mount Rainier
Volcanism occurs at Mount Rainier and other Cascades arc volcanoes because of the subduction of the Juan de Fuca Plate off the western coast of North America.
The Eruption History of Mount Rainier
Timeline of eruptions at Mount Rainier.
Ash and Tephra Hazards from Mount Rainier
Mount Rainier erupts explosively to produce small to moderate volumes of tephra, but volumetrically the volcano is primarily effusive.
Holocene, or Post-Glacial, Eruptions of Mount Rainier
We know more about the recent volcanism at Mount Rainier because deposits postdate extensive glaciation and therefore are well preserved.