Narrative of Mount St. Helens Moments after the outrush of
the avalanche and ash cloud, enormous mudflows slid off the mountain down several of the
adjacent river valleys. These flows were caused by water from blast-melted glaciers and
snow that mixed with the already powdered rock to form pasty, muddy flows. These hot and
cold masses of mud swept down the valleys of several rivers, sweeping away buildings,
vehicles, trees, and even bridges. Trees amounting to more than four billion board feet of
salable lumber were damaged or destroyed by the near-supersonic lateral blast of rock,
ash, and hot gases. One of these flows even reached and blocked the shipping channel of
the Columbia River, 55 miles downstream. Photo: Courtesy of NGDC/NOAA.
[ Narrative of Mt. St. Helens: page 1 / page 2 / page 3 / page 4 / page 5 ] |
HTML code by Chris Kreger
Maintained by ETE Team
Last updated October 23, 1998
Privacy Statement and Copyright© 1997-2000 by Wheeling Jesuit University/NASA Classroom of the Future. All rights reserved.