Idle question of the day...
... how many of you have actually witnessed (as in, with your own eyes, not on TV screens, etc.) a volcanic eruption? I have, I'm just wondering how large a percentage of the population has.
(Mine was the 1970 eruption of Hekla on Iceland; we overflew the lava field and then circled the erupting cone for some time in a private aircraft)
(Mine was the 1970 eruption of Hekla on Iceland; we overflew the lava field and then circled the erupting cone for some time in a private aircraft)
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
-- Steve thinks that's as close as he wants to get in any case. Nuee ardents, sulfur toxicity, CO2 asphyxiation, etc. are best contemplated in the abstract and remote.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
*Except for the picture my parents took of a cloud formation when they were driving back from College Station last year. You'd swear there was a perfect cinder cone in Fort Worth.
no subject
Move to New Mexico, however, it gets MUCH more recent, and of course in California there are active and dormant volcanoes.
Gads, you're such a child! I was a senior in high school on May 18th, 1980.
no subject
no subject
no subject
Good grief, my parents had just graduated college. You really ARE older than dirt.
no subject
In geologic terms, just yesterday -- there was an eruption of several CUBIC KILOMETERS of lava only about 3,000 years ago. New Mexico actually has a huge number of volcanoes of startlingly diverse types (as described here), and I'm actually rather surprised there hasn't been any activity in the last few thousand years, given the existence of a large magma body present below the surface and the fairly continuous history of volcanism.
I am not old at all! My FATHER was old, and as I'm not as old as him, I can't be old.
no subject
Oh, no, Ryk, you're not old. For certain values of "old."
no subject
I'm definitely young. The mirror here is just lying.
no subject
I was twelve and a half, very eager to go to the two-week Suzuki workshop in Forest Grove, Oregon, and bitterly disappointed that the amount of ash made the trip unworkable. People were filtering their drinking water and wearing masks in Forest Grove at the time.
Child?
no subject
The ash plumes were impressive. So was the first time I got a look and saw that the top of the mountain was missing.
However, I was working in a clean room at the time. Ever so much fun on the days that the wind shifted and Portland got some of the ash.
Also fun, the very first time, when we saw some ash filtering into the room. Had to shut down and (I assume) hell was raised with contractors about the clean room (only a class 1000) being leaky in the wrong direction.
no subject
I've also visited the Taal lake in the Philipines (home of the island inside a lake inside an island ... ) which is also allegedly active but wasn't doing anything when I saw it
no subject
no subject
no subject
We grew up learning the eruption-disaster management plans for when Taranaki will erupt.
(Also have been to Volcano National Park in Hawaii, though I managed to be there on a day when nothing was erupting).
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I love volcanoes too. For most of my life up through high school I wanted to be a volcanologist. I was however eventually convinced that being an effort-induced asthmatic who didn't generally do well outdoors was not going to be a good mix with mountains producing irritating sulphuric fumes and silica dust, especially after the St. Helens plume passed over our area and I found it hard to breathe for a day or so.
Still, I would love to visit a few more active ones.
No volcanoes...
no subject