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| By the time Redoubt Volcano first erupted on December 13, 1989, a USGS scientist had designed a prototype system for detecting a lahar as it moved down a river valley. The system relied on seismometers sensitive to high-frequency ground vibrations (10-300 Hertz); seismometers used in recording earthquakes are sensitive to much lower frequencies, usually less than 20 Hertz. The only problem was that the system hadn't been field tested yet. Would it be useful in providing an immediate real-time warning to the people working at the oil terminal? |
Sensors Detect Vibrations |
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| A lahar triggered by the dome collapse on April 6, 1990, was detected by all 3 AFMs. The top graph shows the amplitude of a seismic signal that was triggered directly by the dome collapse at 5:23 p.m. Note the delay in time before the AFM's recorded an increase in ground vibration caused not by the eruption, but a lahar that moved progressively downstream. Note the change in scale for each sensor. Did the seismometer used in detecting earthquakes and volcanic explosions detect the lahar? Did the flow sensors detect the explosion? The peak ground vibration for AFM #1 occurred at 5:30 p.m., AFM #2 at 5:35 p.m., and AFM #3 at 5:59 p.m. |
| The field test at Redoubt Volcano was a tremendous success. Clearly, the system could detect and track lahars moving down a valley in real time. Calculating the flow velocities of the lahars was relatively simple, but estimating the relative size of the lahars proved to be much more difficult. However, experience at other volcanoes with other lahars since 1990 has shown that such estimates are indeed possible. |
Brantley, S.R. (ed.), 1990, The eruption of Redoubt Volcano, Alaska, December 14, 1989 - August 31, 1990: U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1061, p. 33.
Dorava, J.M., and Meyer, D.F., 1994, Hydrologic hazards in the lower Drift River basin associated with the 1989-1990 eruptions of Redoubt Volcano, Alaska: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 62, p. 387-407.
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