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Volcano thread

bjdeming

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Someone shared beautiful pictures on Facebook of Mount Ararat, taken in May, and it occurred to me that perhaps someone might not know that this Biblical mountain is an active volcano.

Here is its Global Volcanism Program page, too.
 

bjdeming

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Yes, Alaska DOES have active volcanoes though they haven't been troublesome lately.

Fortunately for Anchorage, something like this isn't likely to happen again any time soon, per the information statement issued late yesterday (AVO Spurr page), despite the appearance of a new crater lake.

1992 (aircraft noise is loud):



-------------------

2024:

ALASKA VOLCANO OBSERVATORY INFORMATION STATEMENT
U.S. Geological Survey
Wednesday, July 3, 2024, 3:42 PM AKDT (Wednesday, July 3, 2024, 23:42 UTC)
SPURR
(VNUM #313040)
61°17'56" N 152°15'14" W, Summit Elevation 11070 ft (3374 m)
Current Volcano Alert Level: NORMAL
Current Aviation Color Code: GREEN

New observations of a small lake in the summit crater of Mount Spurr support recent seismic and deformation data that indicate a possible minor intrusion of magma has occurred beneath the volcano over the last several months. While the formation of the lake is new, gas emissions remain low and seismic activity is declining, suggesting the probability of an eruption in the near future has not significantly increased. No surface changes have been observed at Crater Peak, the vent 2 miles (3 km) south of the summit associated with all historical eruptions.

The lake first appeared between May 15 and June 15, and was well documented during a June 23 overflight (avo.alaska.edu/image/view/195469) when it had an area of about 1 acre (3800 square meters). The last time a crater lake formed at the summit of Mount Spurr was during seismic unrest in 2004 that did not lead to an eruption.
The June 23 overflight also monitored gas emissions from the volcano and detected low levels of sulfur dioxide and carbon dioxide. The measured compositions are similar to background levels measured in previous years. Deep intrusion of magma is sometimes associated with anomalously high volcanic carbon dioxide emissions, but no such anomaly was detected during the overflight.

Seismic activity beneath Mount Spurr has been above normal levels since spring 2024, but starting on May 20, the degree of seismic unrest has declined and remains slightly elevated (avo.alaska.edu/image/view/195477). The occurrence of deeper (>12.4 miles or 20 km) low frequency earthquakes has been above background levels since spring 2024. A small amount of deformation, consistent with a shallow (less than 3 miles or 5 km depth) source of inflation, has been observed in GNSS data. Similar to the earthquake activity, the rate of deformation appears to be decreasing.

Mount Spurr is monitored by a local seismic network, GPS and infrasound sensors, and a webcam. Remote sensing data including satellite imagery, regional infrasound sensors, and lightning data are also used to detect potential eruptions at the volcano.



Mount Spurr volcano is an ice- and snow-covered stratovolcano located on the west side of Cook Inlet approximately 75 miles (120 km) west of Anchorage. The only known historical eruptions occurred in 1953 and 1992 from the Crater Peak flank vent located 2 miles (3.5 km) south of the summit of Mount Spurr. These eruptions were brief, explosive, and produced columns of ash that rose up to 65,000 feet (20 km)above sea level and deposited minor ashfall in south-central Alaska (up to ¼ inch or 6 mm). The last known eruption from the summit of Mount Spurr was more than 5,000 years ago. In 2004, Mount Spurr experienced an episode of increased seismicity, surface uplift, and heating that melted a large hole in the summit ice cap and generated debris flows. Primary hazards during future eruptions include far-traveled ash clouds, ash fall, pyroclastic flows, and lahars or mudflows that could inundate drainages all sides of the volcano, but primarily on the south and east flanks.



CONTACT INFORMATION:

Matt Haney, Scientist-in-Charge, USGS [email protected] (907) 786-7497
David Fee, Coordinating Scientist, UAFGI [email protected] (907) 378-5460

The Alaska Volcano Observatory is a cooperative program of the U.S. Geological Survey, the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute, and the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys.
 

bjdeming

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This happened several hours ago at Stromboli; the people are okay because they live on the other side of the island from the "Stair of Fire" (Sciara) that Stromboli's flows -- pyroclastic, lava, and landslide -- go down (you'll see that side towards the end of the video):



What does get to the people are tsunamis when the flows are big enough to displace lots of water (this one apparently wasn't).

Hazard here is complex, though, and since the volcano has been tetchy lately anyway and they've gone to Red Alert on this "lighthouse of the Mediterranean," it needed a post; hopefully, it won't progress into something calling for a thread.

Probably not -- Stromboli gets feisty every now and then, and landslides on the Sciara are always a concern, but this volcano typically stays on a fairly low level of activity. Heightened activity doesn't last very long.
 
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