EarthDate
The blast was over a thousand times stronger than Hiroshima, heard 700 miles away. It killed 57 people and countless animals. This was the eruption of Mount St. Helens 45 years ago in Washington, the deadliest, most damaging volcanic event in modern US history. Surprisingly, in America today there are 169 active volcanoes. Most are in Alaska. A few in Hawaii have small eruptions regularly. There are 20 volcanoes in Washington and Oregon, where the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate subducts under North America, melting as it’s pushed down into Earth’s mantle, and rising to produce volcanoes at the surface. A few are active, but St. Helen’s is different. It’s 25 miles west of the others, where the tectonic subduction zone is 20 miles nearer the surface. In 1980, magma blasted sideways through a mile long gash on the side of the mountain. on the side of the mountain, flattening trees in an 8-mile radius. Pyroclastic flows set forest fires. Mudslides filled lakes and diverted rivers, causing massive floods. But within weeks, fireweed sprouted from roots. Lupine and huckleberry crept across the landscape. Insects, burrowing animals and elk soon returned. Aquatic ecosystems rebounded. Today, the top of the peak is gone, replaced by a huge caldera. But new trees have grown tall and the forest has returned.
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