The Full Wiki

Lahar: Wikis

  
  

Note: Many of our articles have direct quotes from sources you can cite, within the Wikipedia article! This article doesn't yet, but we're working on it! See more info or our list of citable articles.

Encyclopedia

Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 03, 2012 20:26 UTC (37 seconds ago)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The lahar from the 1985 eruption of Nevado del Ruiz that wiped out the town of Armero in Colombia.
An evacuation Route sign in case of volcanic eruption or lahar.

A lahar is a type of mudflow or landslide composed of pyroclastic material and water that flows down from a volcano, typically along a river valley.[1] The term "lahar" originated in the Javanese language of Indonesia.

Contents

Description

Lahars can be best described as volcanic mudflows. They may not necessarily be caused by volcanic activity, but at the very least do originate from some type of volcanism. Lahars have the consistency of concrete: fluid when moving, then solid when stopped.[2] Lahars can be huge: the Osceola lahar produced 5,600 years ago by Mount Rainier in Washington produced a wall of mud 140 metres (460 ft) deep in the White River canyon and covered an area of over 330 square kilometres (130 sq mi) for a total volume of 2.3 cubic kilometres (0.55 cu mi).[3]

Lahars can be deadly because of their energy and speed. Large lahars can flow 100 kilometres per hour (60 mph) and can flow for more than 300 kilometres (190 mi), causing catastrophic destruction in their path.[4] The lahars from the Nevado del Ruiz eruption in Colombia in 1985 caused the Armero tragedy, which killed an estimated 23,000 when the city of Armero was buried under 5 metres (16 ft) of mud and debris.[5] New Zealand's Tangiwai disaster in 1953, where 151 people died after a Christmas Eve express train fell into the Whangaehu River, was caused by a lahar.

Causes

Lahars have several possible causes:[2]

In particular, although lahars are typically associated with the effects of volcanic activity, lahars can occur even without any current volcanic activity, as long as the conditions are right to cause the collapse and movement of mud originating from existing volcanic ash deposits.

Places at risk

Several mountains in the world, including Mount Rainier in the USA, Mount Ruapehu in New Zealand, and Galunggung in Indonesia, are considered particularly dangerous due to the risk of lahars. Several towns in the Puyallup River valley in Washington state, including Orting, the closest to Mount Rainier, are built on top of lahar deposits that are only about 500 years old. Lahars are predicted to flow through the valley every 500-1,000 years, so Orting, Sumner, Puyallup, Fife, and the Port of Tacoma face considerable risk. The USGS has set up lahar warning sirens in Pierce County, so that people can flee an approaching debris flow.

A lahar warning system has been set up at Mount Ruapehu by the New Zealand Department of Conservation and hailed as a success after it successfully alerted officials to an impending lahar on 18 March 2007.

The 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo caused lahars as well, but it was due to the passing of a major typhoon over the Philippines which resulted in a torrent of volcanic ash and water down to the rivers surrounding the volcano. The lahar was caused by the mixing of settled ash and water from the monsoon which occurred the day after the volcano finished erupting. Although the eruption killed only 6 people, 1500 were killed in the resulting lahar, showing the destructive nature of lahars. In 1985, the volcano Nevado del Ruiz erupted, releasing large lahars. These lahar flows reached the town of Armero two hours after the eruption, burying the town and killing 3/4 of the townspeople, an estimated 23,000 people.

See also

References

External links


Wiktionary

Up to date as of January 14, 2010
(Redirected to lahar article)

Definition from Wiktionary, a free dictionary

WOTD - 24 July 2009    

Contents

English

Wikipedia-logo.png
Wikipedia has an article on:

Wikipedia

Lahar from the 1982 eruption of Mount St. Helens

Etymology

From Javanese.

Pronunciation

  • IPA: /ˈlɑhɑɹ/

Noun

Singular
lahar

Plural
lahars

lahar (plural lahars)

  1. (geology) A volcanic mudflow.
    • 1985, Jocelyn Thornton, Field Guide to New Zealand Geology, page 204
      Such a highly destructive mud-flow (termed a lahar) eventually stops as a pile of debris of all shapes and sizes, as mixed up as a glacial moraine; the two deposits have often been confused.
    • 2000, Jacques-Marie Bardintzeff & Alexander R. McBirney, Volcanology‎, page 138
      Pyroclastic flows are often difficult to distinguish in outcrops from a similar type of fragmental debris flow known as lahars. Both are characteristically unstratified and unsorted. A deposit containing blocks of varied compositions with rounded shapes is more likely to have been formed by a lahar than by a glowing avalanche.
    • 2006, Andrew J. L. Harris et al., "Downstream aggradation owing to lava dome extrusion and rainfall runoff at Volcán Santiaguito, Guatemala", in William Ingersoll Rose (ed.), Volcanic Hazards in Central America‎, page 86
      A regime of persistent lahar activity results when eruptive activity continually supplies unconsolidated volcanic material for remobilization.

Translations

See also


Basque

Noun

lahar

  1. bramble

Indonesian

Noun

lahar

  1. lava







Got something to say? Make a comment.
Your name
Your email address
Message
Please enter the solution to case below
12+8=