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Detailed map of Mount Rainier's summit and northeast slope showing upper perimeter of Osceola collapse amphitheater (hachured line) The Osceola Mudflow, also known as the Osceola Lahar, was a debris flow and lahar in the U.S. state of Washington that descended from the summit and northeast slope of Mount Rainier, a volcano in the Cascade Range during a period of eruptions about 5,600 years ago.
English: Hazard map around the Mount Rainier, state of Washington, United States. Lava flow and pyroclastic flows Electron Mudflow-sized event (generally large in size)
Burroughs Mountain, situated at the northeast foot of Mount Rainier, WA, exposes a large-volume (3.4 km3) andesitic lava flow, up to 350 m thick and extending 11 km in length. Two sampling traverses from flow base to eroded top, over vertical sections of 245 and 300 m, show that the flow consists of a felsic lower unit (100 m thick) overlain ...
Mount Rainier, a snowcapped volcano, looms over Puyallup Valley near Orting, Washington. The prospect of a lahar — a swiftly moving debris flow caused by melting snow and ice typically during a ...
The volcanic clastic Ohanapecosh Formation is an early state of cascade volcanism. It has been dated to the middle Oligocene [36 to 28 Ma]. [1] The strata are as much as 3 kilometres (1.9 miles) thick, with exposures visible in more than 400 square kilometres (99,000 acres) of a total area exceeding 700 square kilometres (170,000 acres).
A livestream captured lava flow from Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano in lower Puna on May 23. Several volcanic fissures reactivated after an eruption at the summit of Kilauea on May 17, causing a ...
Hazard map. Mount Rainier is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc that consists of lava flows, debris flows, and pyroclastic ejecta and flows. Its early volcanic deposits are estimated at more than 840,000 years old and are part of the Lily Formation (about 2.9 million to 840,000 years ago).
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