Climate Change is Causing Mt Rainier to Grumble
18
August, 2015
The
volcanic Mt Rainier is grumbling. But it’s not what you think. At
least not yet.
According
to reports from the Seattle Times,
the glaciers atop Rainier have melted to the point where they are
becoming unstable. Particularly so with Tahoma Glacier which, all
throughout July to mid August, has emitted large floods of muddy,
ice-choked water. Tahoma sent its floods rumbling down the
mountainsides, filling streams and rivers with roiling, brown
outflows.
These
glacier outburst floods issuing from Rainier have packed quite a
punch. They’ve been strong enough to shake the earth, setting off
seismographs in the region of Rainier. It’s a shaking and
quaking that’s
tumbled boulders down the mountainside, gouged out new flood channels
and smashed great swaths of trees.
(Over
recent months, the Tahoma Glacier on the southwestern face of Mt.
Rainier has been issuing large flows of glacial outburst material.
Those familiar with the mountain believe that a warming climate may
have pushed Rainier’s glaciers into a new era of destabilization.
Image source: Glaciers
of Washington.)
Zachary
Jones noted in his eyewitness report to the Seattle
Times:
“The
rumble was getting louder and trees were falling down and it looked
like a big pile of rubble was raging down the dry creek bed. We saw
huge boulders, half the size of a Volkswagen bug, just raging down
and falling over each other (see
related video here).”
Scientific
Link Between Glacial Melt, Increase in Volcanic Activity
Back
during the 1980s and 1990s, Rainier went through a similar period of
warming-stoked glacial destabilization. Now, the heat is even worse.
A new phase of glacial retreat has isolated Tahoma and set it on path
toward more rapid melt. It may mean that coming years and decades
host a ramping of glacier outbursts for Rainier. It may also mean a
changing of the weight loading atop Rainier’s volcanic vents and
magma chambers. Setting up a rising risk for increased volcanic
activity from Rainier as its overburden rocks and underlying magma
structures develop a new equilibrium.
Recent,
though rather controversial, science has established a link between
glacial retreat over and near volcanic systems and increased volcanic
activity.
In particular, studies
focusing in on Iceland have linked periods of glacial melt with
increased periods of volcanism.
Though it is uncertain whether Rainier will succumb to the added
stresses of glacial melt and respond by entering a new period of
volcanic awakening, the melt human warming is setting off does
provide a new stress to one of the most dangerous volcanic systems in
the western US.
In
other words, Rainier’s grumbling glaciers are bad enough without
adding in a volcanic bassline.
Links:
Hat
Tip to Andy in San Diego
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