Does Mt Rainier have steam vents?

Geologists said apparent "venting" from Mount Rainier seen Wednesday was likely a lenticular cloud formation passing at the perfect angle.

Does Mt Rainier have steam vents?

Lucas Combos, Patch Staff

Does Mt Rainier have steam vents?

Posted Wed, Sep 7, 2022 at 10:53 am PT|Updated Wed, Sep 7, 2022 at 1:50 pm PT

Replies (2)

Does Mt Rainier have steam vents?
Federal officials said a passing cloud formation was likely to blame for what appeared to be volcanic venting at Mount Rainier Wednesday morning. A webcam image from Camp Schurman showed clouds passing the east side of Mount Rainier's summit. (National Park Service)

MOUNT RAINIER, WA — Federal scientists and National Park Service officials moved quickly Wednesday to reassure Puget Sound residents that Mount Rainier was not erupting, despite apparent venting seen near the volcano's summit.

Video shared on social media by KOMO meteorologist Kristin Clark showed what looked like a column of steam coming from Mount Rainier shortly before 9:45 a.m. The clip garnered considerable interest within minutes, prompting a response from the United States Geological Survey's volcano team.

The USGS confirmed Rainier was not in the process of erupting but said the activity seen in the video was not unusual for an active volcano. Officials later clarified that monitoring data showed no changes indicating volcanic activity. A field team of volcanologists that happened to be on-site installing new monitoring equipment provided first-hand confirmation that there were no anomalies.

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According to the USGS, the National Park Service's official assessment is that the apparent venting was actually a cloud formation passing Mount Rainier at just the right angle, pointing to webcam images from the summit showing what looked like lenticular clouds.

A cloud formation atop Mount Rainier on Wednesday. MUST CREDIT: National Park Service photo. (National Park Service/National Park Service)

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By Matthew Cappucci Washington Post

The United States Geological Survey said Wednesday that fears of an imminent Mount Rainier eruption were unsubstantiated. Reports on social media said steam was “venting” from the volcano, but the USGS said it was actually a cloud and not the result of any geologic activity.

Concerns that Mount Rainier was awakening first materialized Wednesday afternoon when a meteorologist at KOMO, Seattle’s ABC affiliate, tweeted a video that appeared to show steam venting from the volcanic mountain’s crater. The clip quickly went viral, amassing 812,000 views by Thursday morning.

The USGS quickly dismissed rumors of an eruption but did not comment on whether the volcano was venting – or exhaling pent-up gases and/or lava and pyroclastic materials such as ash.

“The sort of behavior seen in this video is not unusual,” the agency wrote at 10:09 a.m. .

In a subsequent news release, however, it confirmed that a “new vent has NOT opened on the volcano.”

“After looking at the data we collect, the USGS seismic network does not show any unusual levels of activity coming from Mount Rainier,” the agency wrote.

So if Wednesday’s apparition was not a spurt of steam and was nonvolcanic in origin, what was it?

A cloud. Just a cloud.

A number of webcams operated by the National Park Service and located closer to the crater captured the innocuous cloud forming as moisture-rich air was forced up the summit. As the air ascended, it cooled to its dew point, meaning the parcels reached saturation and the contained moisture condensed. That formed a cloud that poured over the lip of the ridge, appearing similar to steam emanating from the crater.

Weather balloon data from the mouth of the Quillayute River, about 75 miles west of Seattle, showed a very narrow level of moisture present at 14,150 feet. That is probably the layer that rode up and over the edge of the volcano, where it was cooled to saturation.

The air above and below was drier, meaning there were not any other clouds to obscure the view.

Mount Rainier is about 60 miles from downtown Seattle and rises to 14,411 feet in elevation. An active stratovolcano, it is the highest mountain in Washington state and a staple of the Cascades. The last minor eruption occurred in the early-to-mid-1800s, but eyewitnesses reported other eruptive activity during the latter half of the 19th century.

Despite its rather somnolent appearance since, it was named by the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior as one of the 16 most potentially dangerous volcanoes in the world, given its proximity to Seattle.

It has been roughly 1,000 years since the last magmatic eruption at Mount Rainier, but that did not stop Twitter from quickly devolving into a snowballing of speculation – and perhaps a bit of snark. Some users fearfully asked follow-up questions, while others dared the universe to throw another wild card into the mix.

“Sure, why not add an active volcano incident to the bingo card at this point?” tweeted one user.

“Let’s hear what (the volcano) has to say,” wrote another.

Others went on to make humorous quips likening the volcano to the Roman Catholic Church’s tradition of using white smoke to announce the naming of a new pope – instead jeering that the volcano is an auger portending success by the Seattle Mariners.

“It’s white smoke, the Mariners playoff drought is over,” wrote @MarinersMuse on Twitter.

One woman even joked about turning the debacle into a drinking game, tweeting: “Me sitting here wondering how many times @USGSVolcanoes has to say this is a cloud formation. And should I make it a drinking game while reading these tweets.”

The agency went on to discourage heavy alcohol use, writing back: “We would not recommend (a drinking game). Alcohol poisoning would definitely be a possibility.”

The USGS news release said the cloud seen was a lenticular cloud, which forms “when moist air is pushed up and over the top of a mountain, forming a disc shape.” Lenticulars commonly form over Mount Rainier.

However, Wednesday’s cloud atop the summit was rough, asymmetric and not nearly as stratified as a classic lenticular, which often resembles a flying saucer.

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Is it normal for Mt. Rainier to vent?

Rainier appearing to “vent” are hitting the internet, but U.S. Geological Survey says that's not the case. Rainier National Park's assessment says the formation over the tallest mountain in Washington state is just a cloud, according to USGS. “This is not an eruption, and in fact is not unusual sort of behavior.

When was the last time Mount Rainier vented?

The most recent recorded volcanic eruption was between 1820 and 1854, but many eyewitnesses reported eruptive activity in 1858, 1870, 1879, 1882, and 1894 as well. Seismic monitors have been placed in Mount Rainier National Park and on the mountain itself to monitor activity.

Does Mount Rainier have lahars?

Mount Rainier is particularly susceptible to lahars and debris flows because ice, loose volcanic rock and surface water are abundant, and because some slopes have been weakened by hydrothermal alteration of rocks, which now contain abundant water and slippery clay.

Is there lava inside Mount Rainier?

Much of Mount Rainier is composed of andesite lava flows. Lava flows may accompany explosive eruptive activity, but they occur more often after explosive activity declines. The term "andesite" refers to the chemical composition of the rock.