It blew its side out. and it is in washington.
* It blew the top off actually creating a large cloud of ash. This means that it is around 300 km lower in height. If you mean physical features in terms of environment you could say that there is alot of forest, tree plantations used for logging, vegetation, crops and natural habitats to many species of animals.
Hope this helps
Mt. St. Helens is a mountain in Southern Washington state, in the Cascade Mountain Chain. It's most recent major eruption was on May 18, 1980
Cougar, Washington, is probably closest as the crow flies but is over 100 miles by highway. Saint Helens is about 28 miles north west of the volcano.
The process of dropping rocks into new places to create landforms is known as "deposition." This occurs when sediment, soil, and rocks are transported by natural forces such as water, wind, or ice and then settled in a new location. Over time, this accumulation can lead to the formation of various landforms, including deltas, beaches, and floodplains.
erosion
Mesas are broad flat-topped landforms with steep sides. They are commonly found in arid regions and are formed by erosion of sedimentary rocks.
18 May, 1980
Mt. St. Helens is a mountain in Southern Washington state, in the Cascade Mountain Chain. It's most recent major eruption was on May 18, 1980
Cougar, Washington, is probably closest as the crow flies but is over 100 miles by highway. Saint Helens is about 28 miles north west of the volcano.
made of rocks minerals and gisers and join join together and make rocks landforms
the Columbia gorge the Columbia gorge Mt. St. Helens
The weathering of landforms is the gradual breakdown and removal of the rocks making up the landforms.
mount rainer, mount baker mount st. helens a lot of em.
Because you walk on them when you are a hiker
Erosion.
Washington State
Soil, Rocks, Stones, Landforms....
geologist