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Windy Ridge is one of the best places to get an overview of the area devastated by the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. The landscape is littered with sand and gray rocks from that event. Deposits of the debris avalanche are visible to the west. These include the lower parts of The Spillover, where the debris avalanc...
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- The Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument from the Johnston Ridge Observatory, Oct 21, 2010 by Gavin Farrell
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The Johnston Ridge Observatory sits on a bluff just 5-1/2 miles from the crater at an elevation of 4,314'/1,327m and offers grand views of Mount St. Helens and much of the 1980 blast zone. Here you can enjoy spectacular views of the lava dome, crater, pumice plain and the landslide deposit.
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Blast furnace number 7 (or6?) at Carrie Furnace, Rankin Pa.
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This is a 360 degree panorama consisting of two individual 180 degree panoramas, taken at a distance of 12 m in c. 38m above ground. At the overlap of the two views, there are duplicate objects. These duplications disrupt little because the rest of the foreground shows insignificant structures. The panorama shows a 360...
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Völklinger Hütte / Völklingen Steel Mill
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- 1798
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Völklinger Hütte / Völklingen Steel Mill
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Völklinger Hütte / Völklingen Steel Mill
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Just around the corner from where Gary Rosenquist snapped the famous series of photos of the beginning of the eruption of Mount St. Helens on the morning of May 18, 1980. This is near the edge of the blast zone; many trees were knocked down here but quite a few were still standing, albeit stripped of their branches.
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Old industrial site seen from the top of blast furnace No. 5.
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