Volcanic Hazards Case Study Flashcards
(22 cards)
When and where did the Montserrat eruption occur?
Soufriere Hills Volcano
June 1997
Outline features of the Montserrat volcano
Composite volcano
Above destructive plate margin NA plate subducts under Caribbean plate
What happened before the main eruption of Montserrat?
1995 - small eruptions, lahars & earthquakes
1997 - small earthquakes & pyroclastic flows
Outline the main eruption of Montserrat
4-5 mil m^3 material released in 20min
Pyroclastic - 50m within airport - 5.5km from volcano
Large ash cloud
Outline the secondary eruptions of the Montserrat eruption
Eruptions over next months - airport destroyed by pyroclastic flows September 1997
Outline the economic impacts of the Montserrat eruption
- Total value loss = £1bn
- > 20 villages destroyed by pyroclastic flows
- Tourism 1st disrupted but now increased due to volcano
- Schools, hospitals, airport, port destroyed
Outline the social impacts of the Montserrat eruption
- 19 dead 7 injured
- Hundreds lost homes
- Population decline - 8000/12000 left since 1995
4000 came to UK
Outline the environmental impacts of the Montserrat eruption
- Large areas covered with volcanic mats (e.g Plymouth 12m mud & ash buried)
- Veg & farmland destroyed
- Volcanic ash improved soil fertility
Outline the eruption in Montserrat that occurred years later
Feb 2010 - explosive
Vulcanian eruption 15km column ash into the air
Outline 3 short-term responses for the Montserrat eruption
- Montserrat Volcano Observatory made in 1995 predicted 1997
- NGOs (e.g Red Cross) provided temporary schools, medical aid & food
- £17mil in UK paid aid for temporary buildings
Outline 3 long-term responses for the Montserrat eruption
- British citizenship granted in 2002
- Warning sirens tested daily at 12.00 PM
- UK finance aid >£420 mil since 1995
Outline why the impacts for the Montserrat eruption were more severe than normal (3 reasons)
Little management B4
1. Scientists studied 1980 but ignored
2. No disaster management plan so responses slow
3. 1990s key infrastructure built in areas of risk
Outline the Mt St Helens eruption (place & date)
Washington (USA), Mt St Helens
May 1980
Outline the features of Mt St Helens
Composite volcano
Above a destructive plate margin - Juan de Fuca plate subducted under NA plate
Outline the signs that appeared B4 the Mt St Helens eruption
March 1980 - small earthquakes, bulge on the volcano’s side, and releasing ash/steam
Outline the main eruption of Mt St Helens
Magnitude 5.1 earthquake
Eruption of volcanic material (rocks, gas, ash & lava)
Covered 600 km^2 fan-shaped area - veg & buildings destroyed up to 30km away
Shortly after - 2nd eruption 540mil tonnes ash deposited over 57000km^2
Outline 3 economic impacts of the Mt St Helens eruption
- Total cost $1.1 bn
- 27 bridges, 24km railways & 300km roads destroyed
- 200 homes & cabins destroyed
Outline 3 social impacts of the Mt St Helens eruption
- 57 killed (inhaling volcanic ash)
- Unemployment X10 but returned after clean-up
- Hundreds lost homes
Outline 3 environmental impacts of the Mt St Helens eruption
- Almost 240km^2 forest destroyed
- 7000 large animals (bears, deers, etc), thousands of birds, and 12mil young salmon killed
- Sediment dumped in Spirit Lake - raised lake bottom >90m & water level >60m
Who coordinated the emergency responses to the Mt St Helens eruption?
FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) - involved both national organisations & local services
Outline 6 responses to the Mt St Helens eruption
- Face masks - no ash inhalation
- Emergency shelters
- Ash clean-up - 900,000 tonnes removed
- Shipping channels had sediment cleared
- 45,500 acres land replanted - 18.4 mil trees
- Domestic water supplies
Outline how good management meant evacuation was efficient during the Mt St Helens eruption
March earthquakes - United States Geological Survey monitoring - volcanic & seismic activity reports daily
USGS issued warnings about hazardous areas
March - 2000 people evacuated & volcano restricted
Still couldn’t predict eruption accurately