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Here is a 360 view from the east side of Mt. Saint Helens. The location is the East Dome. An old Lava Dome that predates the 1980 eruption. Off in the distance you can see Mt. Rainier, Mt Adams and Mt. Hood. The valley below is known as the Plains of Abraham. The Seismic sensor here, (acronym is EDM) and can be viewed ...
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After a frustrating morning of low clouds, mist and foggy weather we decided to watch the movie they offered. At the end of the film, the curtains behind the screen opened to a sheet of pure white fog; normally a stunning view of the crater and mountain. When we left the theatre there was a slight and hardly noticeable...
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The Duver, St. Helens, Isle of Wight, England, UK. View across the Solent, looking towards the Duver & Portsmouth. In and Around Lincoln homepage.ntlworld.com/stuart.cox
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Culver Down, Isle of Wight, England, United Kingdom. Looking north towards Portsmouth, Bembridge & St Helens from Culver Down. In and Around Lincoln homepage.ntlworld.com/stuart.cox
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www.flickr.com/photos/jondave
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This panorama was taken within the crater of Mt Saint Helens scanning from south to north. The center of the image is the western crater wall with partial views of the crater glacier. The data from the real time short period seismic sensor can be viewed here: The station acronym is SEP. old.pnsn.org/WEBICORDER
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This panorama was taken within the crater of Mt Saint Helens scanning from south to north. The center of the image is the eastern crater wall . The data from the real time short period seismic sensor can be viewed here: The station acronym is NED. old.pnsn.org/WEBICORDER/BETTER/pnsn_staweb/index.html
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Sometime around the year 500 small quantities of ash and lava erupted from St. Helens' north flank. This period ended with the emplacement of dacite domes, including Sugar Bowl around the year 800. The Sugar Bowl dome is a nearly circular protrusion of hypersthene-hornblende dacite, about 800 m in diameter, on the nort...
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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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Shot from Johnston Ridge Observatory 180˚
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