After the eruption, with no ground cover, erosion (both wind and rain) was the main weathering agent. Most weathering is time dependent, more time, more weathering.
Exposure to strong sunlight can also act as a weathering agent. Most of what could be weathered was ash and deadwood.
Mount St. Helens mainly produces blocky lava (andesitic) during its eruptions. However, the volcano has also had episodes where it spewed pahoehoe lava due to changes in eruptive style.
Mount St Helens produces mostly dacite lava, which is relatively high in silica.
Mount St Helens was an active volcano..... put 2 and 2 together. Lava and Humans dont mix very well!
As Mount St. Helens is a volcano the slopes would be covered in layers of volcanic dust and lava.
The material produced by the eruptions of Mount St. Helens have varied over time, but the eruptions of recent decades, including the 1980 eruption, have involved dacite magma, whish is of intermediate-felsic composition. The famous 1980 eruption produced ash and pumice rather than lava.
No. Mount St. Helens is a stratovolcano. There is a lava dome in the crater.
Lava can't flow violently. Highly explosive eruptions such as the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens do not produce lava flows: they produce clouds of ash, gas, and pumice. Mount St. Helens has produced "quiet" lava flows at times.
Mount St. Helens mainly produces blocky lava (andesitic) during its eruptions. However, the volcano has also had episodes where it spewed pahoehoe lava due to changes in eruptive style.
Mount Saint Helens' magma/lava composition is different to many volcanoes and is about 64%silica and 4% water.
Mount St Helens produces mostly dacite lava, which is relatively high in silica.
alternating layers of lava and tephra
by ash, rock, lava, and gas
Mount St Helens was an active volcano..... put 2 and 2 together. Lava and Humans dont mix very well!
As Mount St. Helens is a volcano the slopes would be covered in layers of volcanic dust and lava.
The material produced by the eruptions of Mount St. Helens have varied over time, but the eruptions of recent decades, including the 1980 eruption, have involved dacite magma, whish is of intermediate-felsic composition. The famous 1980 eruption produced ash and pumice rather than lava.
As of August 2017 Mount St. Helens is not showing signs of activity. The last activity, consisting of the growth of lava domes, ended in 2008.
Mount St. Helens is an active stratovolcano located in Skamania County, Washington, in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is part of the Cascade Range. The mountain is well known for its catastrophic eruption in 1980 which dramatically changed its landscape.