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Sediment yield following severe volcanic disturbance - A two-decade perspective from Mount St. Helens

January 1, 2000

Explosive volcanic eruptions perturb water and sediment fluxes in watersheds; consequently, posteruption sediment yields can exceed pre-eruption yields by several orders of magnitude. Annual suspended-sediment yields following the catastrophic 1980 Mount St. Helens eruption were as much as 500 times greater than typical background level, and they generally declined nonlinearly for more than a decade. Although sediment yields responded primarily to type and degree of disturbance, streamflow fluctuations significantly affected sediment-yield trends. Consecutive years (1995–1999) of above-average discharge reversed the nonlinear decline and rejuvenated yields to average values measured within a few years of the eruption. After 20 yr, the average annual suspended-sediment yield from the 1980 debris-avalanche deposit remains 100 times (104 Mg [megagrams]/km2) above typical background level (∼102 Mg/km2). Within five years of the eruption, annual yields from valleys coated by lahar deposits roughly plateaued, and average yields remain about 10 times (103 Mg/km2) above background level. Yield from a basin devastated solely by a blast pyroclastic current diminished to background level within five years. These data demonstrate long-term instability of eruption-generated detritus, and show that effective mitigation measures must remain functional for decades.

Publication Year 2000
Title Sediment yield following severe volcanic disturbance - A two-decade perspective from Mount St. Helens
DOI 10.1130/0091-7613(2000)28%3C819:SYFSVD%3E2.0.CO;2
Authors J. J. Major, T. C. Pierson, R.L. Dinehart, J. E. Costa
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geology
Index ID 70022324
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization California Water Science Center