Chaiten 2008
There are some astounding new pictures of Chaiten in full eruption over at the Smithsonian Website. There pictures were released by the USGS/VDAP team and show a full eruption column coming from the new dome in the Chaiten caldera (see above and below). The dome itself looks giant, filling up a lot of the old caldera (the highlands around the edge of the dome itself). The eruption is almost the antithesis of the 2004-08 Mt. Saint Helens dome eruptions which has produced a minute dome filling the 1980 crater. This rhyolite dome is the first major rhyolite eruption in almost 100 years, so I can’t understate the significance of Chaiten. Exciting stuff for those of us into silicic magma.

5 responses to “Chaiten eruption photos”

  1. Erik:
    There are five pictures of the old pre-eruption dome. Look at: http://volcanism.wordpress.com/?s=dome+keller&searchbutton=go%21
    The anual rainfall there is 3000 mm. If I look at the vegetation of the “old dome” I must assume that it is no more than 300/600 years old, d´ont you think so?
    Regards,
    Werner Luis

Leave a reply to Werner Luis Cancel reply

Recent posts

Quote of the week

“It’s not far-fetched that almost everywhere in the world where you have volcanoes you have mythologies or new gods being created.”

~ Werner Herzog