A volcano is a vent in the earth's crust through which magma, rock fragments, gases,
and ash are ejected from the earth's interior. Over time, accumulation of these erupted
products on the earth's surface creates a volcanic mountain.
Washington State has five major volcanoes in the Cascade Range – Mount Baker, Glacier Peak, Mount Rainier, Mount St. Helens and Mount Adams.
Volcanoes can lie dormant for centuries between eruptions, and the risk posed by volcanic activity is not always apparent. When Cascades volcanoes do erupt, highspeed avalanches of hot ash and rock called pyroclastic flows, lava flows, and landslides can devastate areas 10 or more miles away, while huge mudflows of volcanic ash and debris called lahars can inundate valleys more than 50 miles downstream. Falling ash from explosive eruptions can disrupt human activities hundreds of miles downwind, and drifting clouds of fine ash can cause severe damage to the engines of jet aircraft hundreds or thousands of miles away.
Washington’s volcanoes will erupt again, as shown by activity at Mount St. Helens, which began another eruptive phase in the fall of 2004. Because people are moving into areas near these mountains at a rapid pace, the state’s volcanoes are among the most dangerous in the United States.
Additionally, Oregon’s Mount Hood, about 50 miles southeast of Portland, poses some threat to areas of Southwest Washington along the Columbia River. Mount Hood has erupted repeatedly for thousands of years, most recently during two episodes in the past 1,500 years; the last eruption ended shortly before the arrival of Lewis and Clark in 1805. Mount Hood, and other volcanoes in British Columbia, Oregon, and California, can produce tephra will would fall on and affect Washington. The April 2005 USGS assessment states the threat posed by Mount Hood also is very high.

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