Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The eruption of a Hawaii volcano has experts eyeing volcanic peaks on the West Coast.

West home to 13 from Washington to California

- By Nicholas K. Geranios

SPOKANE, Wash. — The eruption of a Hawaii volcano in the Pacific “Ring of Fire” has experts warily eyeing volcanic peaks on America’s West Coast that are also part of the geological­ly active region.

The West Coast is home to an 800-mile chain of 13 volcanoes, from Washington state’s Mount Baker to California’s Lassen Peak. They include Mount St. Helens, whose spectacula­r 1980 eruption in the Pacific Northwest killed dozens of people and sent volcanic ash across the country, and massive Mount Rainier, which towers above the Seattle metro area.

“There’s lots of anxiety out there,” said Liz Westby, geologist at the U.S. Geological Survey Cascades Volcano Observator­y in Vancouver, Washington, in the shadow of Mount St. Helens. “They see destructio­n, and people get nervous.”

Kilauea, on Hawaii’s Big Island, is threatenin­g to blow its top in coming days or weeks after sputtering lava for a week, forcing about 2,000 people to evacuate, destroying two dozen homes and threatenin­g a geothermal plant. Experts fear the volcano could hurl ash and boulders the size of refrigerat­ors miles into the air.

Roughly 450 volcanoes make up this horseshoe-shaped belt with Kilauea situated in the middle. The belt follows the coasts of South America, North America, eastern Asia, Australia and New Zealand. It’s known for frequent volcanic and seismic activity caused by the colliding of crustal plates.

America’s most dangerous volcanoes are all part of the Ring of Fire, and most are on the West Coast, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Some geologists believe Mount St. Helens is the most likely to erupt.

But six other Cascade volcanoes have been active in the past 300 years, including steam eruptions at Mount Rainier and Glacier Peak and a 1915 blast at Lassen Peak that destroyed nearby ranches.

 ?? Ted S. Warren The Associated Press ?? Mount Rainier is seen Monday at dusk framed by the Murray Morgan Bridge in Tacoma, Wash. The eruption of the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii has geologic experts along the West Coast eyeing the volcanic peaks in Washington, Oregon and California.
Ted S. Warren The Associated Press Mount Rainier is seen Monday at dusk framed by the Murray Morgan Bridge in Tacoma, Wash. The eruption of the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii has geologic experts along the West Coast eyeing the volcanic peaks in Washington, Oregon and California.

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