Alaska’s great eruption of 1912 explained in centennial reports

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The enormous 1912 explosive eruption of Novarupta, a new volcano on the Alaska Peninsula, is exceptional for many reasons. It created the famous Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, triggered the collapse of nearby Mount Katmai volcano, and spurred research and deliberation among practitioners of the growing science of volcanology.

The enormous 1912 explosive eruption of Novarupta, a new volcano on the Alaska Peninsula, is exceptional for many reasons. It created the famous Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, triggered the collapse of nearby Mount Katmai volcano, and spurred research and deliberation among practitioners of the growing science of volcanology.

Two new publications are now available online to mark the centennial of Novarupta and describe the “complexities and wonders” of its 1912 eruption.

The first is a U.S. Geological Survey report written by scientists who have worked on Novarupta and nearby volcanoes for the past three decades. The report is a comprehensive account of the explosive eruption and the scientific exploration, discovery and interpretation of the eruption’s deposits and underground magma system. “The Novarupta-Katmai Eruption of 1912 — Largest Eruption of the Twentieth Century: Centennial Perspectives,” consists of 259 well-illustrated pages and can be downloaded from pubs.usgs.gov/pp/1791.

The second is a recent issue of the Alaska Park Science Journal titled “Volcanoes of Katmai and the Alaska Peninsula.” This publication is a collection of short articles about the Novarupta eruption and many other related topics, including ecological effects and recovery of the area, modern volcano monitoring and the workings of magma chambers. It can be downloaded from nps.gov/akso/nature/science/ak_park_science/volume_11_issue_1.cfm.

Novarupta’s explosive eruption from June 6 to 9, 1912, expelled between 3.1 and 3.4 cubic miles of magma, the second largest in recorded history. The eruption quickly formed a massive ash column that rose more than 19 miles high and spread as an enormous umbrella cloud 1,000 miles wide. The jet stream blew the ash cloud eastward around the world, causing average temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere to drop by about 2 degrees Fahrenheit for more than a year.

During the eruption, Kodiak village, 105 miles to the southeast, was in near total darkness for 60 hours as sulfur and ash filled the air. Lightning struck and buildings collapsed as falling ash at least 12 inches thick smothered the village.

Roughly half of the magma erupted from Novarupta spread as far as 16 miles to the northeast in a series of extremely hot pumice-rich pyroclastic flows that filled a broad valley as deep as 330 to 660 feet. Also called ash flows, these deposits remained hot for decades, resulting in steaming cracks and fissures first seen and described by Robert Griggs in 1916 as the “Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes.” He incorrectly interpreted the fumaroles to reflect heat rising from new magma that was thought to underlie all or much of the valley.

About 11 hours into the eruption, the ash column and pyroclastic flows were still going strong when the first in a series of 14 earthquakes between magnitude 6 and 7 occurred. These earthquakes accompanied the collapse of Mount Katmai six miles away.

Amazingly, sufficient magma from beneath Mount Katmai had erupted at Novarupta to remove support of the cone, and the summit of Mount Katmai collapsed into the void to form a 1.5-mile wide caldera. When first seen in 1916, the steaming caldera floor was about 1,640 feet lower than the lowest part of the caldera rim. The caldera is now filled with water deeper than 655 feet.

After about 16 hours, when nearly all of the pyroclastic flows were emplaced and as Mount Katmai continued to collapse, a lull of only a few hours was followed by a second explosive phase that lasted about 29 hours. Another lull and a third shorter phase signaled the eruption’s end by early June 9.

Until 1953 or 1954, Mount Katmai was mistakenly identified as the vent for the 1912 eruption. Only detailed mapping of the two volcanoes by Univeristy of California at Berkeley geologist Garniss Curtis revealed Novarupta was the real source. Curtis was the first to suggest the magmatic connection between the two volcanoes.

The range and timing of magma types — rhyolite, dacite and andesite — erupted by Novarupta but residing beneath Mount Katmai, is highly unusual. That the magma types also mixed together during ascent to the surface was one of the more astounding stories of the eruption.

Many more exceptional observations and interpretations of Novarupta are described and richly illustrated in both centennial reports on Alaska’s great eruption of 1912.

Kilauea activity update

A lava lake present within the Halemaumau Overlook vent during the past week resulted in nighttime glow visible from the Jaggar Museum overlook. The lake, which is normally about 260 to 380 feet below the floor of Halemaumau Crater and visible by HVO’s webcam, rose and fell slightly during the week in response to a series of deflation-inflation cycles. This past week, the lava lake reached a very high level, about 200 feet below the floor of Halemaumau Crater.

On Kilauea’s east rift zone, surface lava flows were active on the pali and coastal plain over the past week. The flows on the coastal plain have made only minor progress toward the ocean over the past week. As of Thursday, the coastal plain lava flows were still approximately 0.6 miles from the water. There is no active ocean entry.

One earthquake was reported felt beneath Hawaii Island this past week. A magnitude-2.2 earthquake occurred at 5:24 p.m. May 13, nine miles southwest of Waikii at a depth of six miles.

Visit hvo.wr.usgs.gov for detailed Kilauea and Mauna Loa activity updates, recent volcano photos, recent earthquakes and more; call 967-8862 for a Kilauea summary; email questions to askHVO@usgs.gov.

Volcano Watch is a weekly article and activity update written by scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey’s Hawaiian Volcano Observatory.