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Webmaster
02-28-2007, 08:31 AM
By Warren Cornwall

Seattle Times staff reporter


Mount Rainier looks constant and unchanging, an impassive landmark on the horizon. But the mountain hasn't always been so quiet.

About the time Christopher Columbus was arriving in America, a torrent of mud rolled down Rainier's western flank, burying the spot where Orting stands today. Five hundred years before that, an eruption sent a mud flow down the White River Valley to what is now Auburn.

Now, with thousands of people moving within reach of Mount Rainier, scientists say they need to "listen" much more closely to the third-most dangerous volcano in the nation.

Over the next two years, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) plans to increase the number of earthquake monitors from five to nine, ring the mountain with eight new global-positioning (GPS) units to monitor the mountain's movements and speckle it with 21 small metal discs to gauge whether the mountain changes shape.

Mount Rainier National Park officials announced the plan Tuesday, saying the potential environmental impact of the plan will be studied before permits are issued. Park officials are now accepting public comment.

Today, scientists track the mountain's movements primarily with the five earthquake stations. That's enough to be sure they aren't blindsided by an unexpected eruption, said Cynthia Gardner, scientist in charge of the Geological Survey's Cascades Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, Wash.

But they still have significant blind spots, she said.

For example, they can't watch for subtle flexing in a volcano's surface, she said. That can be an early sign of a pending eruption or the collapse that leads to destructive mud flows. The GPS units would do that by beaming a continuous stream of data back to scientists.

The additional earthquake gauges would enable scientists to get a better picture of an earthquake, such as how deep it is. The depth can indicate whether molten rock is moving toward the surface.

In 2005, the USGS declared Mount Rainier a "significantly under-monitored" volcano. It also ranked it the country's third-most dangerous based on how big an eruption could be and how much damage it could cause. The top two are Mount St. Helens and Hawaii's Kilauea.

The present system's limitations were made apparent in October, when a 4.5-magnitude earthquake struck Rainier's eastern edge, said Seth Moran, a seismologist at the Vancouver observatory.

Earthquake monitors showed that aftershocks could be edging closer to the mountain's center, a possible sign of something bigger to come.

It turned out to be nothing — a false clue created by gaps in the network, Moran said. One of the proposed new monitors would sit right near the epicenter of that quake.

The proposed improvements were welcomed by John Vidale, director of the University of Washington's Pacific Northwest Seismic Network, which monitors earthquakes in Washington and Oregon, and has worked with the USGS on the plan.

"The proposed upgrade will help a lot," he said. "But in the end we'd like to get twice as much instrumentation up there."

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003592844_rainier28m.html

For more information:
To read more or submit comments, look online: http://parkplanning.nps.gov/parkHome.cfm?parkId=323

Mail comments to Superintendent, Mount Rainier National Park, 55210 238th Ave. E., Ashford, WA 98304.

Webmaster
03-02-2007, 09:25 AM
More monitors for Rainier

The Associated Press
Published: March 2nd, 2007 01:00 AM

ASHFORD – The U.S. Geological Survey is installing more monitoring equipment around Mount Rainier, considered the third most-dangerous volcano in the United States.
Thousands of people live in communities built over the results of previous eruptions, so scientists want to start paying closer attention to the mountain.

During the next two years, the agency plans to increase the number of earthquake monitors surrounding the 14,411-foot peak from five to nine, ring the mountain with eight new global-positioning units to monitor its movement and place 21 small metal discs to help detect any changes in the shape of the volcano.

Park officials will take comment on the plan announced Tuesday while studying the environmental impact of the plan before permits are issued.

The USGS says Rainier was last known to erupt in between 1820 and 1850, with large eruptions taking place as recently as about 1,000 and 2,300 years ago.

About 5,600 years ago, the massive Osceola mudflow removed the top 2,000 feet of the mountain and covered about 212 square miles to the northwest, reaching as far as the present-day south Seattle suburb of Kent. About 500 years ago, the Electron mudflow reached the present-day town of Orting.

Cynthia Gardner, scientist in charge of the USGS Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, Wash., said scientists are gathering data that could signal an impending eruption but don’t have all the information they want to detect more subtle changes, such as flexing at the surface, which can be an early sign of an eruption or collapse.

In 2005 the agency declared Mount Rainier a “significantly under-monitored volcano” and ranked it as the country’s third most-dangerous volcano after Kilauea in Hawaii and Mount St. Helens.

source: http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/northwest/story/6396676p-5704862c.html