blackeyeblitzar 3 months ago

> The snowcapped peak of Mount Rainier, which towers 4.3 kilometers (2.7 miles) above sea level in Washington state, has not produced a significant volcanic eruption in the past 1,000 years.

Is it possible that other nearby eruptions (St Helens) are releasing the pressure that would otherwise cause an eruption at Rainier?

  • mock-possum 3 months ago

    Not in the last 1000 years, no, but - they do mention they think there have been 11 Lahar events originating from Ranier that have impacted the seattle area, over the past 6000 years - one of which doesn’t even seem to be associated with a volcanic eruption.

    At first I was like “why worry about Ranier when Hood is active” but - yeah the mother of all flash-floods is a horrifying prospect.

    • rdc12 3 months ago

      Different volcano, but back in the 50's the natural tephra damn on the crater lake of Mount Ruapehu (New Zealand) collapsed triggering a lahar, that ultimately took out the piers of rail bridge near Tangiwai minutes before a passenger train tragically attempted to cross the bridge, resulting in mass casualty's.

      So certainly possible for non-expulsive activities to trigger a lahar and for consequences that sound like they are more from a disaster movie then real life to occur.

    • Vecr 3 months ago

      How hard would it be to keep the thing drained at all times?

      • _nalply 3 months ago

        You'll need to melt away the glaciers. Feasible? I am afraid not.

  • EdwardDiego 3 months ago

    I don't think so, as they have separate magma chambers AFAICT, although Mt St Helens does look like it shares its magma chamber with other nearby volcanoes.

mensetmanusman 3 months ago

Would be interesting getting a text that pure destruction is approaching at 4 m/s and will reach your location in 30 minutes.

Not sure what I would do. Wrap my car with metal, and hope for the best?

  • LegitShady 3 months ago

    Just throw some water and essentials in the car and drive in the other direction and don't insulate your car. 4 m/s is like 15 km/h - you can out drive it easily.

    • bluefirebrand 3 months ago

      Somewhat important to note that if everyone does this it will likely overwhelm the roads and end up in gridlock

      • mensetmanusman 3 months ago

        Yeah that’s what I was thinking, in which case what do you build to maximize survival in the mean time? Floating fluffy pods or something

        • LegitShady 3 months ago

          a bicycle. throw a bicycle in a bike rack on your car. when you hit gridlock, bike further out.

nickpeterson 3 months ago

I feel like the really scary prospect is the lager causing a dam failure. I’ve read a few articles from NYT talking about the potential for atmospheric rivers to overwhelm dams in california, causing a cascading collapse. From memory, the potential casualties are incredibly grim (like hydrogen bomb grim). I honestly don’t know what can be reasonably done though. The possibly range is too wide and the timeline too long.