25 years after
blast, St. Helens comes back to life
'It's just amazing what Mother Nature can do'
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Mount St. Helens today
Click on the slide show below to view images of life on the mountain 25 years after the eruption. |
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MOUNT ST. HELENS NATIONAL MONUMENT, Wash. - A small Douglas fir breaks up from the ground six miles from the base of Mount St. Helens. In the distance, trees scattered like dropped matchsticks lie in the place they were toppled by a cloud of fragmented rock and ash that exploded from this mountain 25 years ago Wednesday.
The devastating eruption killed 57 people and an overwhelming amount of plant and animal life. But the barren landscape is now scattered with green, and diverse wildlife has made a home in a vastly different habitat.
“There was nothing out here. It’s easy to forget it was like that,” said Peter Frenzen, monument scientist for the U.S. Forest Service at Mount St. Helens. “The next forest is essentially here. We just have to wait for it all to grow up.”
As the force of the blast destroyed all in its path, it also carried within it new life; seedlings from the south side landed and began to grow, and others arrived via animals returning to the area.
Pine trees, honeysuckle and firs are all growing in the blast zone. Alder, cottonwood and willows also abound in an area once covered with ash and debris.
Reawakening last September
The stunning mountain with the horseshoe-shaped crater in its side rumbled back to life this last Sept. 23, with shuddering seismic activity that peaked above magnitude 3 as hot magma broke through rocks in its path. Molten rock reached the surface Oct. 11, marking the resumption of dome-building activity that had stopped in 1986.
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Scientists have said a more explosive eruption is possible at any time. But the threat level has decreased enough to allow visitors back to the Johnston Ridge Observatory, five miles from the crater. The observatory, named for a scientist killed in the 1980 blast, reopened May 6 for the first time since October.
“This whole mountain is a research tool,” said Jeri Botsford, a volunteer who will tell the story of the mountain to many of the 250,000 people expected to come to Johnston Ridge this summer.
“I’ve seen it come back to life,” she said. “It’s just amazing what Mother Nature can do.”
The 1980 eruption
The recent activity is nothing compared to what happened the morning of May 18, 1980, when the eruption blasted away the top 1,300 feet of the mountain, spawned mudflows that choked the Columbia River shipping channel, leveled hundreds of square miles of forests and paralyzed towns and cities more than 250 miles to the east with volcanic ash.
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Trees that weren’t buried outright by the debris were pushed along a raging mudflow; one dead tree hulk, about 8 feet tall, came to a stop in an upright position along the Hummocks trail, about 6 miles northwest from the base of the mountain.
On a recent sunny day, a herd of nearly 100 Roosevelt elk lounged among black cottonwood and red alder trees a few miles from the mountain.
Many elk were killed in the blast, but others returned within days. The land they returned to was vastly changed — the once lush valley filled with pine and other trees was now about 200 feet higher, with the rocky remnants of the mountain created hills where there was once flat land.
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