Twenty years of the ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory

 

Twenty years of the ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory

Submitted by Ned Rozell
Phone: 907-474-7648

04/22/08

Photo caption below.
Photo by Bill Bolling, courtesy of ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory
AVO’s John Paskievitch and John Power at the remains of a seismic station on Mount Spurr, the nearest active volcano to Anchorage. The late June 1992 eruption from Crater Peak blasted 44 million cubic meters of ash, blocks, and gas into the atmosphere.


Photo caption below.
Photo by Michelle Coombs, courtesy of ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory
Jess Larsen and Mariah Tilman of the ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory approach a helicopter with rock samples from the Augustine Volcano eruption in 2006.

Twenty summers ago, earthquakes rocked the town of King Cove on the ÐÓ°Épro Peninsula. Some people were so worried that the nearby volcano, Mt. Dutton, was going to erupt that they caught flights out of town. Others called in the cavalry--members of the fledgling ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory.

In 1988, John Power had just finished his master’s degree when he became the observatory’s first full-time employee. He flew out to King Cove with a few colleagues to check on the volcano.

"I remember that the biggest earthquake happened in August, on 8/8/88," said Power, a geophysicist with the USGS ÐÓ°Épro Science Center who still works for AVO in Anchorage. "It happened right at the peak of salmon season, so there were a lot of people in town."

After installing a few seismometers on the flanks of 4,800-foot Mt. Dutton, eight miles from King Cove, Power and his comrades saw that the character and the size of the earthquakes didn’t suggest that Mt. Dutton was going to explosively erupt that August.

"We told people, ’we’ll watch it, but evacuation doesn’t make sense right now,’" Power said.

While spending a few weeks in King Cove and bunking at the Peter Pan cannery, Power noticed the earthquake activity waning, showing that the volcanologists had made the right call. The brand-new ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory was one-for-one in advising people what to do, or, in the case of Mt. Dutton, what not to do.

Since that first response in 1988, the ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory has grown from a good idea lobbied for by scientists--including John Davies, Syun-Ichi Akasofu, John Filson, and Tom Miller--into a team of people in Anchorage and Fairbanks who have their fingers on the pulse of more than 30 volcanoes in ÐÓ°Épro. The observatory is a cooperative program of the Geophysical Institute, the USGS and the ÐÓ°Épro Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys. The job of the experts there is to monitor volcanoes and give ÐÓ°Éprons information when they need it most.

"ÐÓ°Épro has more explosive eruptions than any other state," said Jon Dehn, an associate research professor at the Geophysical Institute, "It’s AVO’s responsibility to be prepared so the average person doesn’t have to worry about it."

Like other AVO scientists tuned into ÐÓ°Épro’s volcanoes, Dehn is never far from his cellphone, which rings with Jimmy Buffett’s "Volcano" when an ÐÓ°Épro volcano shows signs of unrest. He and other AVO scientists now monitor an impressive data stream, which was just a trickle in 1988.

The last two decades have seen the development of satellite sensors that allow people to check for volcano hotspots several times a day, precise GPS receivers that enable scientists to watch volcanoes inflate and deflate, infrasound sensors that record sudden changes in air pressure during explosive eruptions, and the advent of a helpful tool called the Internet.

"When AVO was founded, there was no e-mail," Power said.

"We were really kind of winging it in 1988," Dehn said. "But in ’08, our game is pretty tight."

Nowhere was that more evident than during the 2006 eruption of Augustine Volcano, across Cook Inlet from Homer. AVO not only predicted the eruption, but also forecast the migration of ash clouds (which can shut down aircraft engines).

"We ended up with the best dataset we’ve had so far," said Steve McNutt, coordinating scientist at AVO and a research professor at UAF’s Geophysical Institute.

Other improvements to the volcano observatory include the late 1990s instrumentation of volcanoes in the Aleutians. Right now, scientists are monitoring most of the potentially dangerous volcanoes that make up the remote islands, which about 80,000 large jets fly over each year. That wasn’t the case when McNutt joined AVO in the early ’90s, when a volcano named Westdahl was spewing ash into the sky.

"The first report was from a pilot who said Shishaldin (a nearby volcano) was erupting," said McNutt. "That’s what happened 16 or 17 years ago. Nowadays, we catch it first. We’re the ones telling airline pilots, not the other way around."

This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of ÐÓ°Épro Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute. To view past columns or to subscribe, visit www.gi.alaska.edu/ScienceForum/index.html.