WILL MOUNT RAINIER WAKE UP?
The recent eruptions of Mount St. Helens are the first volcanic
eruptions in the continental United States since California's Mount
Lassen in 1917. Geologists were not surprised when St. Helens ended its
123 year dormancy. Mount St. Helens is still in the cone building stage.
During the past 600 years Mount St. Helens has erupted every 100 to 200
years. As a matter of fact, it has been the most active and violent
Cascade volcano for the past 4500 years.
Is Mount Rainier as active as Mount St. Helens? The answer is no. The
last major eruption of Mount Rainier took place about 500 to 600 years
ago, at which time there were heavy ash and pumice falls.
Unlike Mount St. Helens, which is younger and is materials, Mount
Rainier is a composite volcano, andesite lava flows bedded between
layers of ash composed of explosive pyroclastic built mainly of hundreds
of andesite lava flows bedded between layers of ash and pumice.
It is believed that there was some volcanic activity on Mount Rainier
in the 19th Century. The October 25, 1873 issue of the Washington
Standard reported the following:
The Dispatch says that last Sunday afternoon about 2 o'clock a
slight shock of an earthquake was felt at Seattle, and at 4 o'clock
clouds of smoke were seen pouring from the highest peak of Mount
Rainier. The smoke was seen until nearly dark when clouds shut down upon
the mountain hiding it from view.
This was one of many newspaper accounts reporting eruptions on Mount
Rainier on at least 14 different occasions between 1820 and 1894. Since
geologists discovered only a light layer of ash from that time most of
the "eruptions" which people reported seeing were probably only dust
clouds rising from large rockfalls or the cloud cap frequently seen over
Mount Rainier.
Will Mount Rainier erupt again? It is quite possible and scientists
are monitoring it carefully. Yet, no one knows for sure when, and if, it
will wake up from its dormancy. Hopefully, the complex mysteries of
volcanoes will diminish as geologists gain more insight through their
study of Mount St. Helens.
Theresa Carroll
from ORIGIN OF GEOGRAPHIC NAMES OF TACOMA/PIERCE COUNTY
WASHINGTON by Gary Fuller Reese
Mazama Ridge: Mazama is a Spanish word for "mountain goat" and
is the name of the climbing club of Portland, Oregon. The club had many
outings on Mount Rainier beginning in 1905. The ridge is below the
Paradise Glacier east of Paradise Lodge in Mount Rainier National Park.
The Mazama climbing club was organized on the summit of Mount Hood on
July 19, 1894. It was the second climbing club to be organized on the
Pacific Rim, the first being the Sierra Club which was founded by John
Muir in 1892.