Photos show the eruption of Mount St. Helens, the worst volcanic disaster in US history, 45 years ago
When Mount St. Helens erupted on May 18, 1980, it caused enormous devastation.
The eruption triggered mudslides, an explosion, and plumes of ash that did enormous damage.
The death of 57 people led to large changes in how the US monitors and prepares for eruptions.
On May 18, 1980, Don Swanson placed a frenzied call to his wife to let her know that he was OK.
"That's nice," she said, unconcerned.
She had no idea her geologist husband had spent the morning in a plane flying by an erupting volcano.
At 8:32 a.m. Pacific Time that day, a magnitude 5.1 earthquake had shaken Mount St. Helens, leading to its eruption.
Its conical top collapsed into a horseshoe crater, sending rivers of mud and rock down its side and an enormous blast of heat and gas to the surrounding forest. Ash clouds wafted for over 930 miles, all the way to central Montana.
The devastating natural disaster killed 57 people and was the most destructive volcanic eruption in US history. It leveled trees, destroyed bridges, and caused more than $1 billion in damage.
Just a few years before the eruption, The New York Times described Mount St. Helens as a "relatively little known volcano 50 miles north of Portland, Oregon." Its eruption forever changed the way volcanologists, geologists, and other scientists perform their jobs.
To commemorate the anniversary of Mount St. Helens' eruption, here's a series of photos that captured the immense devastation it caused 45 years ago.
Years earlier, scientists predicted Mount St. Helens would violently erupt.
In 1978, the USGS issued a report stating that Mount St. Helens had the potential to violently erupt before the end of the millennium.
The last known eruption had been in 1857. Over the past few centuries, its recent dormant periods lasted an average of 123 years. It was only a matter of time.
By the spring of 1980, Mount St. Helens had been trembling for weeks.
Thousands of small earthquakes in March and April caused cracks in the summit. On March 27, steam started pouring out, turning the snow an ashy gray.
"That's when it becomes this multi-agency response because now you have to prevent people from getting too close," Liz Westby, a geologist with the USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory, told Business Insider in 2024. "It could possibly erupt, but that wasn't a for-sure thing."
Meanwhile, people climbed on their roofs to take pictures of the steaming top. "Everyone really wanted to catch that glimpse of Mount St. Helens," she said.
When the earthquake hit on May 18, its northern side collapsed. That triggered a debris avalanche, forcing down enough rock, dirt, and snow to fill a million Olympic swimming pools. Some of it traveled as far as 14 miles away.
Ash-filled plumes rocketed 650 feet into the sky.
A super-hot mix of rock, gas, and ash caused incredible destruction.
The avalanche sheared off part of the cryptodome, a magma-filled bulge that had swollen part of Mount St. Helens' north side by about 450 feet.
Rapidly expanding gas then caused a devastatingly powerful blast that exploded sideways instead of up and formed what's called a pyroclastic flow. The mixture can reach blistering temperatures of 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit.
"That is such a hot, thick, gas-rich flow that it essentially kills everything in its path," Westby said.
The heat, force, and high-speed debris can all be deadly. It knocked over trees, leaving them stripped and looking like toothpicks.
Moving at 300 miles per hour, the flow traveled faster than the debris avalanche, covering roughly 230 square miles, an area nearly the size of Chicago.
"Then you see this plume rising up," Westby said.
This one, full of ash and rock, rose as high as 80,000 feet. The eruption lasted nine hours.
Melting snow and ice mixed with rocks and ash turned into mudslides.
Mount St. Helen was still snowcapped in May when it erupted. The scorching heat turned ice and snow into gushing water that took rocks and soil with it.
Known as lahars, these 100-mile-per-hour volcanic mudslides ripped up trees, destroyed over 200 houses, and took out bridges.
Millions of tons of ash traveled hundreds of miles, closing highways and canceling flights.
Westby was at Eastern Washington University, not far from the Idaho border, when the volcano erupted. What looked like an ominous line of dark clouds drifted in the sky above.
"I thought, wow, that's the weirdest thunderstorm I've ever seen," she said. It turned out to be ash.
Wind blew roughly 520 million tons of ash and volcanic glass to eastern Washington, Idaho, and Montana. It was dark enough to obscure the sun in some cities.
It settled on everything, leaving trees with a dusting of what looked like snow.
"This ash, it's fine like baby powder," Westby said. Driving through it would stir it back up into the air.
For days afterward, authorities closed highways and canceled flights because of the poor visibility and the ash's potential to damage plane engines, Westby said.
The eruption killed 57 people, including USGS geologist David Johnston.
One of the first USGS geologists at the volcano was David Johnston. He had been closely monitoring Mount St. Helens during its many earthquakes.
On May 18, Johnston was only 6 miles from the volcano. As the eruption started, he radioed a final message to a nearby Washington city: "Vancouver, Vancouver. This is it."
After that, Johnston's death would have come within a minute, his fellow geologist Swanson wrote.
"It hit home to us as geologists, as volcanologists, how important it is to have monitoring up at the volcanoes and to install sensors before unrest so that we don't have to have people up there in harm's way," Westby said of Johnston's death.
Leading up to the eruption, experts created safety zones around the volcano. Only essential workers could go to the red zone.
However, the majority of the 57 people who lost their lives were outside the red zone, NPR reported. Many were killed by the lateral blast, Westby said. It ended up being more powerful than anticipated.
"It still gets me a little bit, thinking about that," she said, "but that really influences how we feel about hazards today."
Now, she said, hazard maps are much more accurate and take into account a range of an eruption's possible outcomes.
The eruption destroyed trees and killed wildlife, but many species survived.
Over a week after the eruption, researchers from the USDA Forest Service started looking at the ecological impact. Ecologists were shocked by what they saw at Johnston Ridge, about 6 miles from the summit.
They had expected to find nothing. Instead, there were still carpenter ants, frogs, pocket gophers, spiders, and other signs of life.
Thousands of large mammals like elk and bears didn't survive, but other species of plants and animals were buried in snow or sleeping in their dens.
The blast zone where a hot flow of gas toppled trees is now known as the pumice plain, named for the porous rock that volcanoes create.
Initially, nothing survived in this area. It was two years before researchers saw the first plant, a prairie lupine. The purple-flowered perennial is known to be resilient.
It took four years following the eruption for new greenery to shoot up in the "ghost forests" where the volcano left broken and dying trees.
A few gophers had a remarkable impact on the volcano's recovery.
In 1983, scientists realized not much was growing on the lava-scorched regions of Mount St. Helens. They tried an experiment. They flew a few northern pocket gophers to the volcano and put them in enclosures for about 24 hours.
They did what gophers do, digging holes. Burrowing into the soil helped aerate it and dispersed bacteria and fungi that promote plant growth.
"They're often considered pests, but we thought they would take old soil, move it to the surface, and that would be where recovery would occur," University of California, Riverside microbiologist Michael Allen said last year.
Little did they know the lasting, positive impacts the gophers' tunneling would have. After six years, 40,000 plants had sprung up where they'd turned over the soil. The other areas stayed bare.
In the decades since, the environment has drastically changed.
A new ecosystem has slowly emerged on the volcano. In the absence of larger predators, their prey thrived.
The smaller animals and dormant plants that survived the volcano's destruction are still there, and bears, cougars, elk, and mountain goats have been spotted, too, The Seattle Times reported in 2020.
That doesn't mean Mount St. Helens is back to normal, ecologist Charlie Crisafulli told the Seattle Times. With the pumice plain area starting from scratch, ecologically, what's happening there now is unique.
The eruption spurred changes to how the US monitors and responds to earthquakes.
In addition to ecology, Mount St. Helens offers opportunities for other kinds of scientific research. Two years after the eruption, the USGS established the Cascades Volcano Observatory to better monitor the volcanic range.
The Observatory, which was dedicated to David Johnston, is one of only five in the US. It's become a kind of laboratory for volcanic research and monitoring.
It's also helping to train what could be the next generation of volcanologists. Every summer, Westby and the Mount St. Helens Institute run a camp for middle school girls called GeoGirls.
"We treat them as though they were our field assistants, to give them an idea of what it's like to work on volcanoes," Westby said.
Mount St. Helens could erupt again.
Mount St. Helens continued to have smaller eruptions through 1986 and then had more between 2004 and 2008.
"They are active volcanoes," Westby said of the Cascades, the volcanic arc that runs through several states and Canada. "They've erupted in the past, and we know they'll erupt in the future."
Of all the Cascade volcanoes, Mount St. Helens is the most active and most likely to erupt again, Westby said. But the technology to predict eruptions has vastly improved.
In 1980, Mount St. Helens only had a single seismometer, Westby said. "Now we've got 20," she said. These newer devices are more sophisticated and can detect smaller earthquakes that could signal an impending eruption.
GPS data can also alert scientists if the ground is deforming. And software can help them process the data more quickly. In the 1980s, scientists were making the calculations by hand.
As the sensors help geologists keep an eye on what's happening beneath the ground, Westby says people should feel free to enjoy the volcanoes. "They're safe to be around right now," she said, "but you never know what happens in the future."
This story was originally published on May 18, 2024 and was updated on May 18, 2025.
Read the original article on Business Insider
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
What made Mount Etna's latest eruption so rare
MILAN — Mount Etna, the volcano that towers over eastern Sicily, has again captivated the world with a spectacular show , spewing smoke and high into the sky. But the defining event of Monday's eruption was the more rare pyroclastic flow from the southwestern crater not visible from a distance.


Digital Trends
2 hours ago
- Digital Trends
10 amazing images to mark 60 years of U.S. spacewalks
On June 3, 1965, NASA astronaut Ed White became the first American to exit a spacecraft in orbit. 'This is the greatest experience, it's just tremendous,' White said as he floated outside the Gemini 4 spacecraft on that historic day. Recommended Videos To mark the 60th anniversary since the first U.S. spacewalk, we've compiled a collection of 10 awesome images captured during the first-ever U.S walk, as well as subsequent walks that have taken place over the years. 1. First up, Ed White during his historic spacewalk on June 3, 1965. For his safety, the record-setting astronaut was secured to the spacecraft by a 25-foot umbilical line and tether during his 20-minute adventure. 2. NASA astronaut Scott Parazynski appears to wave to the camera while attached to a foot restraint at the end of the Space Shuttle's Orbiter Boom Sensor System during a spacewalk in 2007. 3. NASA's John B. Herrington, seen at the far left of the image, during a walk outside the Space Shuttle Endeavour in 2002. 4. NASA astronaut Suni Williams pictured secured to the space station's Canadarm2 robotic arm, with the orbital facility's solar arrays behind her during a walk in 2025. 5. With a dramatic cloudy backdrop, astronaut Robert L. Curbeam, Jr. can be seen during a spacewalk at the space station in 2006. 6. Bruce McCandless II is seen approaching his maximum distance from the Space Shuttle Challenger in an extraordinary spacewalk in 1984 that saw him become the first astronaut to maneuver in space untethered. McCandles was trialing a nitrogen-propelled, hand-controlled backpack device called the Manned Maneuvering Unit. 7. Reid Wiseman takes part in a 2014 spacewalk at the space station some 250 miles above Earth. During the 6-hour, 13-minute spacewalk, Wiseman and ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst worked outside the station's Quest airlock, relocating a failed cooling pump to external stowage and installing gear that provides back up power to external robotics equipment. 8. NASA's Christina Koch snaps a 'space selfie' with Earth behind her. She and fellow NASA astronaut Jessica Meir worked outside the ISS for more than seven hours during the first-ever all-woman spacewalk in 2019. 9. American astronaut Dale A. Gardner gets up close and personal with the spinning WESTAR VI satellite during a mission in 1984. Gardner used a special device to stabilize the communications spacecraft sufficiently so that it could be captured and placed in the cargo bay of the Space Shuttle Discovery for return to Earth. 10. Astronauts Carl Meade and Mark Lee during a spacewalk in 1994. Lee can be seen attached to the Space Shuttle's robotic arm.


Health Line
3 hours ago
- Health Line
Does Osteoporosis Affect Your Teeth?
Teeth are not bones, so they are not directly affected by osteoporosis. However, osteoporosis can lead to jaw damage, which in turn can cause serious dental problems. Osteoporosis is a bone disease resulting in the loss of bone mass and density. It can lead to weak bones, which increases the risk of fractures. Like many people with osteoporosis, you may wonder if it will affect your teeth. The short answer is: not directly. Since your teeth aren't actually bones, osteoporosis itself doesn't change your teeth's health or composition. Yet osteoporosis can have an indirect effect on your teeth. This is because it can cause changes to your jaw, which can affect how your teeth are held in place. In fact, osteoporosis has been associated with an increased likelihood of tooth loss for this reason. It's important to not only brush your teeth but also brush up on information about how osteoporosis may affect your oral health. We'll review what to know about how teeth and bones differ, current research on how osteoporosis affects teeth, and how treatment works. What are teeth made of? Although they do have some characteristics in common, your teeth and your bones are not made of the exact same materials. Your bones are mostly collagen and the mineral calcium phosphate. Teeth, on the other hand, consist of the following main layers: Enamel is the hard calcified tissue on the top (crown) of teeth that isn't made of living cells. Cementum is another type of hard tissue that protects a tooth's root. Dentin is below enamel and cementum, making up most of our teeth's interior and providing structure. Pulp is the innermost layer of our teeth and contains nerves and blood vessels. Osteoporosis damages your bones' ability to produce new tissue to make up their spongy interior. People may mistake teeth for bones because the whitish enamel covering the crown of your teeth looks like bone. But unlike our bones, enamel isn't made of living tissue. Research findings The link between osteoporosis and tooth loss is well-established and has been the subject of many scientific studies. These include: A study from 2017 also found that postmenopausal women in South India were more likely to experience tooth loss if they had developed osteoporosis. A 2024 systematic review concluded that osteoporosis is associated not only with loss of bone density in the jaw area but also with periodontal disease and tooth loss. A 2024 study showed that osteoporosis is associated with loss of bone in the alveolar process (the bone structure that holds the roots of your teeth in place), leading to tooth loss. Another 2024 study of postmenopausal women saw an association between vertebral fractures and tooth loss. Researchers are pretty clear that osteoporosis and tooth loss are connected, but they are still investigating the exact nature of that connection. A key theory for the link is that as osteoporosis progresses, your jawbone also weakens and loses some of its density. When the jawbone weakens, teeth begin to lose some of their stability. These jawbone changes may affect tooth alignment, damaging their roots and causing oral health complications. Osteoporosis medications and teeth If you take medication for osteoporosis, be sure to talk with your doctor about its possible effects on your teeth. Be aware that medications that strengthen bones can sometimes cause damage to your jawbone. The treatment most commonly prescribed for people with osteoporosis is bisphosphonate therapy. Bisphosphonates, which can be administered orally (by mouth) or intravenously (through a vein), can help strengthen your bones and ward off future fractures. Many people also take calcium or vitamin D with bisphosphonates, according to the American College of Rheumatology. But there's a risk to your jaw and teeth when you take bisphosphonates. This type of treatment has been linked to the development of a rare degenerative complication called osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ). According to the Endocrine Society, the risk of developing ONJ is highest after dental surgery. It tends to occur more frequently in people who have undergone 'high dose, long-term therapy, as might be given during cancer treatment.' Keeping bones and teeth healthy One of the most important things you can do is prioritize the health of your bones and teeth by maintaining habits that contribute to their overall well-being. Some key factors include: eating a b alanced diet making sure you get 800 to 1000 IU of vitamin D each day aiming for 1,000 to 1,200 milligrams of calcium each day not smoking, or considering quitting smoking if you currently smoke limiting your consumption of alcohol being physically active — the World Health Organization (WHO) has exercise guidelines by age group If you're having trouble getting enough calcium or vitamin D from the foods that you eat, talk with your doctor or a nutritionist about taking a supplement. Make sure you always take supplements as directed. Proper dental hygiene is essential for the long-term health of your teeth. The American Dental Association (ADA) recommends the following: Brush your teeth thoroughly twice a day for 2 minutes per session. Use toothpaste containing fluoride when brushing your teeth. Clean between your teeth daily (including flossing, interdental brushes, and others). Limit your intake of sugary beverages and snacks. Aim to visit your dentist for regular checkups. Let your dentist know if you're taking an antiresorptive agent, like a bisphosphonate, so they can accommodate it in your treatment plan — especially if you'll be undergoing any surgical procedures like a tooth extraction. You likely won't need to stop taking your osteoporosis treatment or skip the procedure, according to the ADA, but your dentist may need to make some accommodations. Know your risk Prioritizing and monitoring oral health can be especially important if you have existing dental health concerns or if you have certain risk factors for osteoporosis. Your chances of developing osteoporosis increase as you get older. Women tend to be at elevated risk, and the loss of estrogen that occurs with menopause can also contribute. Treating osteoporosis Currently, there's no cure for osteoporosis, so prevention remains the best strategy. However, there are several osteoporosis management and treatment options, according to 2018 research. Certain drugs for osteoporosis aim to prevent bone loss (antiresorptive medications), while others seek to regrow bone (anabolic medications). Both classes of drugs aim to increase bone density and lower your chance of fractures. Depending on your specific needs and health, your doctor might advise taking the following: Bisphosphonate medications. These are usually the first medications prescribed for postmenopausal women, and they work by slowing the breakdown of bone. Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs), also known as estrogen agonists, are a class of medications that also treat osteoporosis in women and other conditions like breast cancer. Most commonly, SERMS, raloxifene, is used to treat these conditions. Hormone replacement therapy. These drugs are synthetic versions of our naturally occurring hormones. Since loss of estrogen due to menopause can contribute to osteoporosis, estrogen therapy can help, although it's often not the first-line treatment. Testosterone therapy is sometimes used similarly for osteoporosis in men. Calcitonin. This is a synthetic version of a hormone your thyroid gland produces that regulates calcium. It comes in a nasal spray and is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treating osteoporosis in certain postmenopausal women. Antibody medications. Also called biologics, these can slow the breakdown of bone and encourage new bone formation. The two available drugs are denosumab and romosozumab, both administered through injections. Parathyroid hormone therapies. Parathyroid hormones (PTHs) increase bone density and strength, helping prevent fractures. The PTH injectable medications teriparatide and abaloparatide are both FDA-approved to treat osteoporosis. Calcium and vitamin D supplements. These are essential for building and maintaining strong bones (and teeth). Physical therapy (PT) is also often used to treat osteoporosis and aims to strengthen muscle and bone to prevent future fractures (or recover from fractures). A PT exercise regimen will be tailored specifically to your health needs. It can be done in a few minutes per day at home or at regular sessions with your physical therapist. Takeaway Teeth are not bones, so they aren't directly affected by osteoporosis. However, osteoporosis can affect your teeth indirectly by causing changes or damage to your jawbone. Maintaining healthy habits promotes bone and oral health in the long term. This includes not smoking, eating a balanced diet, exercising regularly, and practicing proper dental hygiene.