Portland Bureau of Emergency Management/Historic Disasters in the Portland Metro Area/Eruption of Mount St. Helens: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search

Washington State patrol cars outfitted with makeshift air filters in the aftermath of the 1980 St. Helens eruption.
| Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
|United States Geological Survey | |United States Geological Survey | ||
|Variety of technical information about volcanic ash. | |Variety of technical information about volcanic ash. | ||
|- | |||
|2014.10__ | |||
|[https://volcanoes.usgs.gov/vsc/file_mngr/file-132/mount-st.-helens---mount-adams-volcanic-region-coordination-plan-october-2014.pdf Mount St. Helens - Mount Adams Volcanic Region Coordination Plan] | |||
|Washington Military Department, Emergency Management Division | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
|2007.__.__ | |2007.__.__ | ||
Latest revision as of 21:02, 6 December 2025
Wikipedia article: 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens
1980 Post-eruption Ash Cleanup

| Date | Title | Author | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025.12.03 | 1980 Mt St Helens Ash Cleanup (presentation slides) | Jim Quinn, Metro | Presentation slides to PBEM and Portland NET on the 1980 ash cleanup effort. |
| 2023.01.10 | Volcanic Ash and Gas Impacts & Mitigation | United States Geological Survey | Variety of technical information about volcanic ash. |
| 2014.10__ | Mount St. Helens - Mount Adams Volcanic Region Coordination Plan | Washington Military Department, Emergency Management Division | |
| 2007.__.__ | Guidelines on Preparedness Before, During and After an Ashfall | Dr. Claire Horwell | Details procedures to follow if warning of a volcanic ashfall is given, recommends what to do during ashfall, and what methods are most effective for cleaning up volcanic ash after the event. |
| 2000.05.14 | Mount St. Helens remembered: 'God is speaking' | Ross Anderson, Seattle Times | Retrospective on the eruption. |
| 1981.__.__ | Mount St. Helens Ash - Properties and Possible Uses | Wayne S. Moen and Glennda B. McLucas, Washington Department of Natural Resources | From the abstract: "Several nonmetallic mineral-oriented companies have considered possible uses for the ash. These uses include: Abrasives, glass and ceramics, fillers, pozzolan, asphalt admixture, and fertilizer and insecticide carriers. Testing is in progress for a variety of these uses. To date, selling the ash as a souvenir of the eruption of Mount St. Helens has proven to be most profitable." |
| 1980.06.30 | Mt. St. Helens Ash Cleanup (report) | Jerry Markesino, Street Cleaning Supervisor, Portland Department of Public Works | Cited as a very helpful resource with details on how to address ashfall cleanup. |