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- <text id=91TT1385>
- <link 93XP0313>
- <title>
- June 24, 1991: Volcanoes:What Makes Them Blow
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 24, 1991 Thelma & Louise
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 42
- What Makes Them Blow
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Advance warnings of volcanic blasts in the Philippines and Japan
- show how researchers are getting the knack of predicting eruptions
- </p>
- <p>By J. MADELEINE NASH/CHICAGO--With reporting by Seiichi Kanise/
- Tokyo, Laura Lopez/Mexico City and Nelly Sindayen/Manila
- </p>
- <p> When 15,000 anxious Americans were evacuated from Clark
- Air Base in the Philippines last week, they didn't know what to
- think. Were they in real danger or the victims of a false
- alarm? Within 48 hours, they got their answer. Nearby Mount
- Pinatubo, after sleeping quietly for more than 600 years,
- suddenly erupted in a series of explosions that shot plumes of
- steam and ash as much as 30 km (20 miles) into the sky. Debris
- rained down on surrounding villages, and a giant mushroom cloud
- was visible 100 km (60 miles) away in Manila.
- </p>
- <p> The confirmed death toll was only six in the first few
- days, thanks to advance warnings and speedy evacuations. But
- great dangers remained. Fearing bigger explosions, officials
- ordered tens of thousands evacuated. An approaching typhoon,
- moreover, threatened to send destructive mudslides down the
- mountain. Whatever happens, the swift action by the government
- reflected the improving ability of scientists to monitor
- volcanic activity and identify the telltale events that presage
- eruptions.
- </p>
- <p> Mount Pinatubo's blasts came just one week after Japan's
- Mount Unzen blew its top, with more deadly results. The red-hot
- avalanches hurtling down the mountain's slopes killed at least
- 35 people. But the toll could have been much higher if
- scientists had not sounded the alarm that an eruption was
- imminent. In fact, many of those killed were journalists and
- volcanologists drawn to the mountain by the warnings, whereas
- most residents of the area fled to safety. They may have to stay
- away for a long while: Mount Unzen erupted again last week, and
- the worst may not be over. A series of blasts from the mountain
- in 1792 created landslides and tidal waves that killed 15,000
- people.
- </p>
- <p> Both Pinatubo and Unzen lie along the infamous Ring of
- Fire, a crescent of volcanic activity that runs around the rim
- of the Pacific Ocean through the edges of Asia, North America
- and South America. Washington's Mount St. Helens, which
- exploded spectacularly in 1980, is part of the ring. It contains
- three-quarters of the earth's 540 historically active volcanoes.
- Since such mountains are erupting in one place or another almost
- all the time, it is merely a coincidence that Pinatubo and Unzen
- are exploding simultaneously.
- </p>
- <p> The number of eruptions these days is not abnormal, but
- human populations near the fiery mountains have been growing
- rapidly. Never before have the volcanoes posed such a serious
- threat. Some volcanologists believe, for example, that Mount
- Fuji has entered an active phase, raising the specter of a giant
- eruption only 100 km (62 miles) from Tokyo.
- </p>
- <p> But scientists hope to foretell most major eruptions, and
- their record is increasingly impressive. Since 1980, Mount St.
- Helens has erupted 22 times, and 19 of those episodes were
- predicted by U.S. Geological Survey volcanologists at the
- Cascades Volcano Observatory, in Vancouver, Wash. Warnings have
- also preceded eruptions of Alaska's Redoubt Volcano, which
- roared to life in 1989.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike earthquakes, which often happen without warning,
- impending volcanic eruptions generally signal their arrival.
- Before a blowup, instruments can detect a series of tremors in
- the mountain, which indicate that molten rock, called magma, is
- coming up from deep inside the earth. The magma rises gradually,
- opening fissures that serve as its pipelines to the surface.
- What happens next depends on the composition of the magma. If
- it is fairly liquid, it generally produces a stately lava flow
- that poses more of a threat to property than to humans. Hawaiian
- volcanoes tend to follow this pattern.
- </p>
- <p> But the volcanoes clustered along the Ring of Fire are
- more dangerous. The ring traces a geologically active zone
- where sections of the earth's crust, known as plates, are
- colliding. Generally the weaker oceanic plates are forced
- beneath the thicker continental slabs. The friction of grinding
- rock, combined with heat welling up from the earth's interior,
- transmutes the lower edge of the oceanic plate into magma. Thick
- with silica, this type of magma tends to solidify near the
- surface, forming domes and plugs that seal off the channels
- through which the magma rises. Such blockages turn a volcano
- into a giant pressure cooker. At a certain point, when the
- surrounding rock is no longer strong enough to hold the
- expanding magma, the mountain blows apart.
- </p>
- <p> The main tools of the volcanologist include seismometers,
- which record the swarms of tiny earthquakes that occur as the
- magma rises. Chemical sensors, mounted on airplanes, can detect
- increases in sulfur-dioxide emissions, indicating that magma has
- reached the surface. In addition, the physical swelling of
- mountain slopes, well documented at Mount St. Helens, is a sign
- of explosive potential. Laser-based devices can pick up minute
- bulges that are about the width of a nickel and still invisible
- to the naked eye. In Japan researchers have set up video cameras
- to monitor the shape and color of fumes at 19 of the country's
- most worrisome volcanoes.
- </p>
- <p> The Japanese have donated instruments that will enable
- Mexico to keep a closer watch on Popocatepetl near Mexico City.
- And shortly after Pinatubo first showed signs of activity in
- April, the U.S. Geological Survey sent to the Philippines a team
- of scientists equipped with seismometers, tiltmeters (to
- measure tiny shifts in the slope of the mountain) and laptop
- computers to collect and analyze data. Several of the
- instruments, however, were obliterated by last week's eruptions,
- hampering efforts to figure out the volcano's next gambit.
- </p>
- <p> Is all this complex gear necessary? After all, Indonesian
- volcanologists have established a warning system that makes
- effective use of dedicated, if often poorly equipped, human
- observers. The answer is that the better scientists get at
- predicting eruptions, the less chance of false alarms. In 1976,
- 72,000 residents of the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe were
- forced to leave their homes because a nearby volcano seemed
- about to blow. Several months later, after no eruption occurred,
- the considerably discomfited evacuees returned home. And ever
- since 1980, the California resort area of Mammoth Lakes has
- fretted over recurrent clusters of small earthquakes. The resort
- abuts a huge depression caused hundreds of thousands of years
- ago by an exploding volcano. "What the earthquakes mean is that
- the volcanic system is still alive and dynamic," notes Robert
- Tilling of the U.S. Geological Survey. "But we don't know enough
- yet to be able to predict if, or when, it might again explode."
- </p>
- <p> One of Tilling's colleagues, geophysicist Bernard Chouet,
- believes he may have found an answer to this dilemma. Prior to
- many large-scale eruptions, he says, seismometers have picked
- up tremors that appear to be caused, not by the fracturing of
- rock, but by low-frequency waves that resonate through the magma
- itself. While their origin remains a mystery, these vibrations
- may result from small surges of gas and molten rock. Large
- numbers of such signals preceded Mount St. Helens' 1980 blast.
- They also appeared before the unexpected explosion of Mexico's
- El Chichon in 1982, the blowup of Colombia's Nevado del Ruiz in
- 1985 and 1987 and multiple eruptions of Alaska's Redoubt.
- Seismometers positioned at Pinatubo have recorded similar
- seismic patterns.
- </p>
- <p> The greatest threats to human lives may come from
- overlooked, long dormant volcanoes. To monitor a volcano
- requires identifying it beforehand; as recently as 1981,
- Pinatubo was not even included in the worldwide registry of
- volcanoes maintained by the Smithsonian Institution. "When a
- nice little hill covered with lush vegetation finally wakes up,"
- observes Smithsonian volcanologist Tom Simkin, "it's going to
- cause a lot of damage." Fortunately, scientists were able to see
- that some nice little hills in the Philippines and Japan were
- turning nasty while people still had time to get away.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
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