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/ Mount St. Helens 25th Anniversary |
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Spokane, Washington |
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Jeff Renner recalls 'the big one'
11:15 AM PDT on Wednesday, May 18, 2005
Climbing into a volcano is like entering a different planet. There may
be blue sky above, but otherwise the surroundings seem alien.
Glacial ice and snow melted by the heat of hydro-thermal or steam vents
reveal rock in muted shades of red, brown, black and gray. It can be a
noisy place – the cacophony of rock and ice fall, joined by the loud
hissing of steam jetting out of vents at speeds of one hundred miles per
hour or more.
The heat is intense enough to melt ordinary thermometers, and a gas mask
is an important safety precaution. Gases include sulfur and arsenic
compounds, which crystallize in mounds of sunburst yellow and rust
orange around the vents.
Jeff Renner (left) on Mount Baker in 1978
In the fall of 1978, I joined scientists on Mount Baker in the North
Cascades. That was the volcano considered most likely to erupt. Little
did I know that only one-and-a-half years later it would be a different
volcano to erupt – Mount St. Helens, farther south along the Cascade
range.
St. Helens wakes up
About mid-morning in March of 1980, KING-TV received word that there’d
been a sudden eruption on Mount St. Helens. It wasn’t a complete
surprise; a U.S. Geological Survey study the year before had fingered
this classic cone-shaped volcano as the best candidate for an eruption
in the next ten years.
It wasn’t because of recent activity, but because of its fairly regular
hundred-year cycle of eruptions.
Flying to the volcano in a chartered helicopter, photographer Mark
Anderson and I didn’t know what to expect. Hearing that the volcano had
erupted, the classic image of lava cascading down the flanks and ash
billowing out of the summit came to mind.
It was a rare sunny day when we approached St. Helens, and it was
quickly obvious that no ash or steam or lava was issuing from the cone.
There was a coating of black ash on and near the summit, surrounding a
gaping crater.
It turned out that rising magma had triggered a steam eruption within
the volcano’s internal plumbing, which blew out a small plug of rock.
Pieces littered the glacier at the summit.
Camping out
Over the next seven weeks, Mark, engineer Mike Coleman and I spent much
of our time camped out on surrounding ridges. We’d either offer
helicopter rides to scientists or accept them.
Jeff Renner and photographer at the Mount St. Helens crater
I spent free moments studying geology texts to gain a better
understanding of what this volcano was doing, and what questions to ask
the scientists monitoring this awakening giant.
Sleeping at various times in unheated campers or even tents, we’d awake
in the middle of the night to downpours, snowstorms or rattling pumice
falls from small explosions. After waking one morning to bear tracks
just outside, we limited our after-dark tours away from our campsite.
It was the assignment of a lifetime, using our training and skills to
tell the stories of both the mountain and the people who either lived
there or were attracted by the spectacle. We broadcast daily, meeting a
fascinating parade of scientists and characters, several of whom became
friends.
One of the former was a geologist named David Johnston, the other a
colorful resort owner named Harry Truman.
Harry was a walking, talking seismograph. Visiting him once when the
earth began to tremble, he pointed to a swaying Christmas ornament
saying, “There, that’d be about a 5.4…not quite a 5.5, but bigger than a
5.3”. The University of Washington later confirmed his estimate of the
earthquake’s magnitude-exactly.
David Johnston was one of many dedicated scientists attempting to
decipher the volcano’s stirrings. A geo-chemist by training, he’d take
gas samples from volcanoes. Small variations in the chemistry of those
gases could point to important changes in the volcano’s behavior. David,
like many of his colleagues, had a passion for both their science and
the grand but dangerous beauty of volcanoes.
A last-minute schedule swap put Dave on duty the weekend of May 18. It
was supposed to be a quiet weekend. That’s why our crew from KING
finally went home for a few days' rest.
The mountain explodes
The morning of Sunday, May 18, was sunny. At 8:32 a.m., seismograph
needles blackened the paper-covered recording drums. The eruption had
started.
Jeff Renner reports from the disaster zone
A local resident called me at home to tell me ash was falling on his
house. At first that didn't seem alarming, but moments later, when he
reported lightning coming out of the ash cloud, I realized this was the
"big one." We left Seattle almost immediately.
By the time our crew arrived near the volcano, the whole area was
engulfed in brownish-gray ash.
We felt a sense of profound disorientation. Nothing looked the same.
There was no green, in fact few trees were left standing. The beautiful
clear water of the Toutle River was a raging torrent of thick mud and
ash.
As we flew beneath the ash cloud and over the river, we’d see railroad
flat cars, pieces of bridge, logging trucks, pieces of buildings and
huge trees all being driven downriver like toys.
Forced by the ash back to the town of Toutle, we joined other
helicopters using the high-school athletic field as a landing site. It
was then we saw the stretchers, some bearing people needing minor first
aid, others covered from head to foot – the first victims of the
eruption.
Hitting close to home
Later that evening, I heard that both Harry and David were missing and
presumed dead.
This car, found with victim inside, was less than 50 yards from the KING 5 campsite, left the night before the eruption.
David, it turned out, had uttered the famous words “Vancouver,
Vancouver, this is it!” seconds before the big blast blew him off the
ridgetop.
That was the loss that affected me the most. We were close in age,
shared similar interests and a tendency to live life on the edge.
Some months later, I met his father in the Chicago area to share some
experiences. As we parted, he said, “I miss David a lot, and part of me
wishes I never encouraged his interest in geology and volcanoes. But I
couldn’t do that. He loved his work and used to say that each day was an
adventure, an opportunity to learn something new, to use that knowledge
to be a better scientist and to help other people.”
I hope as people think about the eruption, the transformation of a
wilderness wonderland into a moonscape, they’ll think of the many
scientists, including David, who worked then and now to do just that.
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