Mount Saint Helens

The May 1980 eruption of Mount Saint Helens in Washington state is considered 'Plinian' by scientists, named after the ancient Roman scholar Pliny, the only eyewitness to record the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in August 79 A.D. In other words, the two eruptions were very similar, both characterized by a tremendous explosion that unleashed a column of ash miles into the atmosphere and scorched the area around the crater with fast-moving, super-heated pyroclastic surges and flows killing everything in their path. All photos on these pages were taken by Tom during the summer of 2003, and we can assume that Vesuvius looked very much the same twenty-three years after it buried Pompeii nearly two thousand years ago.


Mount Saint Helens Pic of the Week

(updated every weekend)


See the map below to find out where the photos were taken.

 

 

Vesuvius

Photographs

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