MEDIA RELEASE
The United States is home to 169 active volcanoes that can erupt at any time. These volcanoes not only threaten areas near them, but can endanger air traffic and sometimes even distant communities in the path of their ash and gases.
To keep communities safe, it is essential to monitor hazardous volcanoes so that the public knows when unrest begins and what hazards can be expected.
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is responsible for issuing timely warnings of potential volcanic activity to affected communities and civil authorities to keep what is a natural event from turning into a major natural disaster.
“The heart of our mission is public safety and seeing our science used,” explains USGS Associate Director for Natural Hazards Dave Applegate. “We have to be there in the moment of crisis when the world turns to the USGS looking for information that helps people understand, react to and respond to a disaster. Our networks have to be up and running and our information has to be available in order to make a difference.”
Living with Dangerous Volcanoes
In the last 50 years, eruptions at U.S. volcanoes have inundated communities with lava, swept people to their deaths, choked major rivers, destroyed bridges, and devastated huge tracts of forests.
Clouds of volcanic ash erupted from Alaskan volcanoes have disrupted air traffic as far away as the upper Mid-West.
With new and ongoing research, and recent upgrades to observatories and monitoring stations, USGS continues to improve its ability to monitor volcanic activity, warn of impending eruptions, and work with partners to forecast the path of ash fall.
“It is essential that we know what a volcano is capable of doing, and it is crucial to be able to detect the unrest at our volcanoes in the earliest stages so that we can inform and warn the public, allowing people to take actions that will reduce their risk and thereby protect society,” says Charlie Mandeville of the USGS Volcano Hazards Program.
Volcano Monitoring and Building the USGS National Volcano Early Warning System
One of the best ways to manage volcano hazards is to understand when and where volcanoes are likely to erupt, and how they will behave during periods of unrest.
Changes in gas emissions, swelling of a volcano, and swarms of small earthquakes are signs that a volcano is awakening. All of these changes can be detected with proper monitoring equipment.
“We want to detect those early signs of activity as early as possible such that we’re not racing to catch up with a re-awakening volcano,” says Mandeville. “That means we need to have instruments installed on volcanoes before they become restless.”
In 2005, the USGS released the first-ever comprehensive review of U.S. volcanoes, ranking them from most to least dangerous and identifying those most in need of improved monitoring. The recommendations of this review comprise the National Volcano Early Warning System (NVEWS), a national-scale, scientifically vetted effort to monitor the most dangerous volcanoes commensurate with their threat.
NVEWS, which was developed by USGS and partners in the Consortium of U.S. Volcano Observatories, has six focus areas:
* Modernizing the volcano monitoring networks
* Funding needed research on hazardous phenomena and risk mitigation
* Establishing a system for organizing and sharing volcano hazards data to make information more accessible
* Revising volcano threat levels periodically based on new research findings and updating instrumentation plans
* Implementing a 24/7 operation that will allow the USGS to deliver forecasts, alerts and notification of volcanic unrest at the earliest stages
* Continuing to improve the Nation’s preparedness for responding to eruptions. USGS scientists work with emergency responders, affected communities and businesses, and the public to provide critical scientific information to help make informed decisions on how to prepare for and react to volcanic hazards.
Modeling and Tracking Volcanic Ash: Ash-3D
Forecasting where volcanic ash clouds will travel, how much ash will fall, and how the ash will affect important infrastructure helps people know how to plan for a possible eruption or respond to an actual one.
USGS scientists have developed a new computer model, Ash-3D, that uses data from the eruption and atmosphere to forecast where the ash cloud will drift, and where, when and the amount of ash fall that is expected to occur.
“During eruptions, the public wants to know where ash is headed, but most importantly, when will ash begin falling, when will it stop, how much ash, and at what concentrations, meaning will the ash turn day into night?” says Tom Murray, USGS Volcano Science Center Director.
“Ash-3D will help the USGS and the National Weather Service provide more specific information to guide decisions by school districts whether or not to close schools, whether local health agencies issue warnings, and help airport managers estimate how much time they have until ash begins falling and how many planes can safely depart before the airport has to close. And when ash will stop falling and cleanup can begin,” Murray says.
Preparing for Tomorrow
Through its work advancing eruption forecasting capabilities and maintaining and improving monitoring equipment at key volcanoes, the USGS will continue to provide the information the public needs before, during and after a volcanic event, to prevent this hazard from becoming a disaster.
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