John W. Ewert
United States Geological Survey
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Featured researches published by John W. Ewert.
Science | 1983
Thomas J. Casadevall; William I. Rose; Terrence M. Gerlach; L. P. Greenland; John W. Ewert; Richard Wunderman; Robert B. Symonds
The monitoring of gas emissions from Mount St. Helens includes daily airborne measurements of sulfur dioxide in the volcanic plume and monthly sampling of gases from crater fumaroles. The composition of the fumarolic gases has changed slightly since 1980: the water content increased from 90 to 98 percent, and the carbon dioxide concentrations decreased from about 10 to 1 percent. The emission rates of sulfur dioxide and carbon dioxide were at their peak during July and August 1980, decreased rapidly in late 1980, and have remained low and decreased slightly through 1981 and 1982. These patterns suggest steady outgassing of a single batch of magma (with a volume of not less than 0.3 cubic kilometer) to which no significant new magma has been added since mid-1980. The gas data were useful in predicting eruptions in August 1980 and June 1981.
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2009
Simon A. Carn; John S. Pallister; Luis E. Lara; John W. Ewert; S.F.L. Watt; Alfred J Prata; Robert J. Thomas; Gustavo Villarosa
On 2 May 2008, a large eruption began unexpectedly at the inconspicuous Chaiten volcano in Chile’s southern volcanic zone. Ash columns abruptly jetted from the volcano into the stratosphere, followed by lava dome effusion and continuous low- altitude ash plumes [Lara, 2009]. Apocalyptic photographs of eruption plumes suffused with lightning were circulated globally. Effects of the eruption were extensive. Floods and lahars inundated the town of Chaiten, and its 4625 residents were evacuated. Widespread ashfall and drifting ash clouds closed regional airports and cancelled hundreds of domestic flights in Argentina and Chile and numerous international flights [Guffanti et al., 2008]. Ash heavily affected the aquaculture industry in the nearby Gulf of Corcovado, curtailed ecotourism, and closed regional nature preserves. To better prepare for future eruptions, the Chilean government has boosted support for monitoring and hazard mitigation at Chaiten and at 42 other highly hazardous, active volcanoes in Chile. The Chaiten eruption discharged rhyolite magma, a high-silica composition associated with extremes of eruptive behavior ranging from gentle lava effusion to violent, gas-driven explosions. As the first major rhyolitic eruption since that of Alaska’s Katmai-Novarupta in 1912, it permits observations that are benchmarks for future such events. It also reignites the debate on what processes rekindle long-dormant volcanoes, justifies efforts to mitigate rare but significant hazards through ground-based monitoring, and confi rms the value of timely satellite observations.
Journal of Applied Volcanology | 2015
Angela K. Diefenbach; Nathan J. Wood; John W. Ewert
Understanding how communities are vulnerable to lahar hazards provides critical input for effective design and implementation of volcano hazard preparedness and mitigation strategies. Past vulnerability assessments have focused largely on hazards posed by a single volcano, even though communities and officials in many parts of the world must plan for and contend with hazards associated with multiple volcanoes. To better understand community vulnerability in regions with multiple volcanic threats, we characterize and compare variations in community exposure to lahar hazards associated with five active volcanoes in Washington State, USA—Mount Baker, Glacier Peak, Mount Rainier, Mount Adams and Mount St. Helens—each having the potential to generate catastrophic lahars that could strike communities tens of kilometers downstream. We use geospatial datasets that represent various population indicators (e.g., land cover, residents, employees, tourists) along with mapped lahar-hazard boundaries at each volcano to determine the distributions of populations within communities that occupy lahar-prone areas. We estimate that Washington lahar-hazard zones collectively contain 191,555 residents, 108,719 employees, 433 public venues that attract visitors, and 354 dependent-care facilities that house individuals that will need assistance to evacuate. We find that population exposure varies considerably across the State both in type (e.g., residential, tourist, employee) and distribution of people (e.g., urban to rural). We develop composite lahar-exposure indices to identify communities most at-risk and communities throughout the State who share common issues of vulnerability to lahar-hazards. We find that although lahars are a regional hazard that will impact communities in different ways there are commonalities in community exposure across multiple volcanoes. Results will aid emergency managers, local officials, and the public in educating at-risk populations and developing preparedness, mitigation, and recovery plans within and across communities.
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2009
Larry G. Mastin; Marianne Guffanti; R. Servranckx; Peter W. Webley; Stefano Barsotti; K. G. Dean; Adam J. Durant; John W. Ewert; Augusto Neri; William I. Rose; David J. Schneider; Lee Siebert; B. Stunder; G. Swanson; Andrew Tupper; Alain C. M. Volentik; Christopher F. Waythomas
Open-File Report | 2005
John W. Ewert; Marianne Guffanti; Thomas L. Murray
Archive | 2006
William I. Rose; Gregg J. S. Bluth; Michael J. Carr; John W. Ewert; Lina C. Patino; James W. Vallance
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2005
Marianne Guffanti; John W. Ewert; Gregory M. Gallina; Gregg J. S. Bluth; Grace L. Swanson
Natural Hazards Review | 2007
John W. Ewert
Open-File Report | 2009
Larry G. Mastin; Marianne Guffanti; John W. Ewert; Jessica Spiegel
Archive | 2013
Norman G. Banks; Robert I. Tilling; David H. Harlow; John W. Ewert