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44 years ago today Mt St Helens erupted

Posted on 5/18/24 at 5:58 pm
Posted by stout
Smoking Crack with Hunter Biden
Member since Sep 2006
167600 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 5:58 pm





The eruption resulted in the loss of 57 lives and caused widespread destruction. Hundreds of homes were demolished, along with 57 bridges and around 200 miles of roads and highways. Moreover, tens of thousands of acres of forest land were levelled by the eruption's force.



This post was edited on 5/18/24 at 6:00 pm
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
262007 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:01 pm to
I was awed by it, and have been fascinated with geology ever since.

Posted by Chrome
Chromeville
Member since Nov 2007
10387 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:04 pm to
Mount St Helens erupting and your driving a Pinto. I don't like his chances.
Posted by Shiftyplus1
Regret nothing that made you smile
Member since Oct 2005
13382 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:09 pm to
he lived
Posted by Possumslayer
Pascagoula
Member since Jan 2018
6215 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:11 pm to
I remember Walmart sold little glass viles with ash in it from st Helen
Posted by Gee Grenouille
Bogalusa
Member since Jul 2018
4968 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:12 pm to
The dirtbike attached to the car like that makes me realize how materialistic we've become. A baw would need a $70,000 truck to take his dirtbike somewhere now.
Posted by LSUGrrrl
Frisco, TX
Member since Jul 2007
33422 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:13 pm to

I watched it live on a tv similar to this in my room.

LINK
Posted by stout
Smoking Crack with Hunter Biden
Member since Sep 2006
167600 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:18 pm to
quote:

I watched it live on a tv similar to this in my room.


I thought you were my age. I was 6 months old
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
55036 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:22 pm to
And it was 50 years ago just last month that the greatest fake volcanic eruption ever happened.

Posted by LSUGrrrl
Frisco, TX
Member since Jul 2007
33422 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:22 pm to
I was 4
Posted by deltaland
Member since Mar 2011
90977 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:24 pm to
Man that would be terrifying to be that close to a pyroclastic eruption like that.
Posted by LSU Grad Alabama Fan
369 Cardboard Box Lane
Member since Nov 2019
10377 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:27 pm to
Posted by stout
Smoking Crack with Hunter Biden
Member since Sep 2006
167600 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:28 pm to
quote:

Man that would be terrifying to be that close to a pyroclastic eruption like that.


quote:

David Johnston, a scientist studying Mount St. Helens when it erupted in 1980, was killed in the blast. His body was never recovered.

They never found David Johnston, the young scientist who put himself in harm’s way on the morning of May 18, 1980 when Mount St. Helens erupted.

Specializing in volcanoes, Johnston had taken a shift to keep an eye on the bulging north side of Mount St. Helens over that weekend. He was working out of a camper, armed with a radio, binoculars and instruments.

What nobody knew was just when the mountain would erupt and how much warning anybody would get.

“David said, ‘We’re essentially next to a keg of dynamite,’” said Jeff Renner, then-KING 5 science reporter. Renner was also living on and off on the mountain covering months of buildup.

He often interviewed Johnston on St. Helens and had known Johnston since they first met on Mount Baker during unrest there two years earlier. But St. Helens was far more serious.

“He says the fuse is lit, but we don’t know how long the fuse is,” Renner said.

Johnston grew up in Illinois, which is not known for spectacular scenery much less geological unrest. He spent time studying volcanoes in Alaska before coming to the University of Washington, where he was a graduate student of now Professor Emeritus Steve Malone, who was also deeply involved in monitoring earthquakes at St. Helens in 1980.

“We didn’t know ultimately what would happen. We knew it was a very hazardous place,” said Malone.

He remembered flying over Johnston’s camping trailer in a helicopter days before the eruption. Malone was installing seismic stations to keep taps on the constant rumbling of tens of thousands of small earthquakes as magma moved deep under St. Helens.

“I was installing two stations on May 16 – one on Elk Rock to the west and another site near Timberline. And flying in the helicopter across there I could look over and see the camper that was up on Coldwater Ridge,” said Malone. “I was too far away to recognize who was there, but I could see someone; it probably was him.”

Two days later, Mount St. Helens erupted in a massive explosion. Malone said he thought of Johnston that morning.

“Very early on when I heard how big it was, that was one of my first thoughts not knowing,” Malone said. “And then probably late in the morning when word was coming in that the devastation area was huge, and it started to sink in.”

“David Johnston was literally blasted off the mountain ridge he was on, and his body was never found,” said Renner.



LINK



This post was edited on 5/18/24 at 6:29 pm
Posted by 0x15E
Outer Space
Member since Sep 2020
12829 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:39 pm to
quote:

“David Johnston was literally blasted off the mountain ridge he was on, and his body was never found,” said Renner.


There was no body to find
Posted by deltaland
Member since Mar 2011
90977 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 6:59 pm to
quote:

David Johnston was literally blasted off the mountain ridge he was on, and his body was never found,” sa


A wave of super heated gases, ash, rock tend to make short work of a human body
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
262007 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 7:03 pm to
quote:


And it was 50 years ago just last month that the greatest fake volcanic eruption ever happened.


Porky Bickar.

There's several stories about his legendary pranks. One of that old breed. He was quite a lumberjack too.


Mt Edgecumbe has recently had some magma activity, moving up.

LINK

This post was edited on 5/18/24 at 7:10 pm
Posted by BK Lounge
Member since Nov 2021
3640 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 7:07 pm to
That movie w/Art Carney seems like it was on all the time on HBO circa the early 1980s .
Posted by 91TIGER
Lafayette
Member since Aug 2006
17758 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 7:07 pm to
Watched it after Buckskin Bill on the news (when it was 'news'), before i rode my bike to school. I was 11 and remember it like it was yesterday.

Buckskin Bill



WAFB in Baton Rouge
Posted by Thracken13
Aft Cargo Hold of Serenity
Member since Feb 2010
16127 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 7:08 pm to
was watching a special on prime today - I have always been fascinated with mt saint Helens
Posted by dukke v
PLUTO
Member since Jul 2006
203694 posts
Posted on 5/18/24 at 7:14 pm to
I remember it well…. Mother Nature at her best.
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