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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Mount St. Helens in Washington State

For months, scientists cautiously awaited the certain eruption of Mount St. Helens. Instruments measured the volcano’s activities, and geologists gathered to study the volcano and its impact on the surrounding area. May 18, 1980 began as a bright morning giving no hint of what was about to occur. Just after 8:30 A.M. (PDT), an earthquake a mile beneath the volcano unleashed energy that had been confined for decades. The explosion loosened the already unstable northern side of the volcano, and not only changed the visage of that portion of the Cascades, but deeply shook the foundation of the geological timescale once believed to be “set in stone.”

The Eruption

In the months before its eruption, Mount St. Helens signaled to many observing geologists that a catastrophic event was about to take place. As magma produced and filled caverns just below the surface, the mountain’s northern slope began to bulge under the pressure. It bulged from 5–50 feet (1.5–15 m) outward each day, creating a very unstable surface. Concerned geologists watched while they closed roads, prevented residents from returning to their homes and recorded and analyzed the volcano’s activities.   Continue at AnswersInGenesis

See also: Mt. St. Helens and Catastrophism

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