Publication | Open Access
Use of digital aerophotogrammetry to determine rates of lava dome growth, Mount St. Helens, Washington, 2004-2005
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Citations
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References
2008
Year
Beginning in October 2004, a new lava dome grew on the glacier-covered crater floor of Mount St. Helens, Washington, immediately south of the 1980s lava dome. Seventeen digital elevation models (DEMs) constructed from vertical aerial photographs have provided quantitative estimates of extruded lava volumes and total volume change. To extract volumetric changes and calculate volumetric extrusion rates (magma discharge rates), each DEM surface was compared to preeruption DEM reference surfaces from 1986 and 2003. Early in the 2004-5 eruption, DEMs documented deforming glacier ice and crater floor that formed a prominent "welt" having a volume of 1010 6 m 3 and a growth rate of 8.9 m 3 /s before dacite lava first appeared at the surface on October 11, 2004. Afterward, the rate was initially 5.9 m 3 /s but slowed to 2.5 m 3 /s by the beginning of January 2005. During 2005, the extrusion rate declined gradually to about 0.7 m 3 /s. By December 15, 2005, the new dome complex was about 900 m long and 625 m wide and reached 190 m above the 2003 surface. More than 7310 6 m 3 of dacite lava had extruded onto the crater floor.
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