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Volcano Hazards: | Types and Effects
| Location | | Gas | Lahars | Landslides | Lava Flows | Pyroclastic Flows | Tephra | |
Lake breakouts commonly occur weeks to months after a river or one of its tributaries become blocked by a landslide or other volcanic deposits, especially pyroclastic flows and lahars. The most frequent cause of a lake breakout is the overflow of water across the newly formed dam and subsequent erosion and rapid downcutting into the loose rock debris. As more water rushes from the lake, the initial channel grows deeper and wider, which allows even more water to surge downstream. By eroding the blockage and river channel downstream, the initial surge of water will incorporate a tremendous volume of sediment and increase in volume two to four times or more as it races downvalley.
Lake breakout causes lahars at Mount Pinatubo, Philippines |
| Hundreds of lahars triggered by heavy rain formed after the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo. The rainwater eroded loose, hot pyroclastic flow deposits (shown here) that filled river valleys around the volcano to depths of 220 meters. The lahars not only covered large areas downstream with sediment,destroying homes and farmland, but also temporarily blocked tributary streams. |
Lahars Block Tributary |
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Pyroclastic-flow deposits from the 1991 eruption filled the south fork of the Pasig-Portrero River, which flows from right to left. After the formation and breakout of several lakes from this valley, a new lake began to form in 1994 during the Philippine's summer monsoon season. |
July 5, 1994 |
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Lake Forms Behind Lahar Deposits |
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Full development of the lake. The primary cause of this new lake was the deposition of sediment by lahars along the main channel of the river during the 1994 rainy season. The sediment prevented water flowing into the south fork from entering the main river. |
August 30, 1994 |
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Lake Breakout Generates Lahar |
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After a moderate rainfall, water flowing over the blockage severely eroded through the lahar and pyroclastic-flow deposits during the night. The resulting lake breakout generated a lahar that swept downstream and killed approximately 25 people. |
September 22, 1994 |
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Community Before Lake Breakout |
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Town of Bacolor (foreground) along the levee-bounded Pasig-Portrero River, downstream of the lake. The gray area in the upper left is covered with sediment deposited by lahars and normal streamflow in 1992. New lahar outbreaks through the levee in July 1994 had begun to encroach at the top right. |
July 27, 1994 |
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Community After Lake Breakout |
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Lahars from September 1994 though and after the date of this photograph buried Bacolor to depths of 5 meters in the town and more than 10 meters in some outlying villages. |
September 6, 1995 |
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