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Predicting Volcanic Eruptions
People have long hoped to reliably predict volcanic eruptions. An automated system at Piton de la Fournaise in France has been doing so since 2014 with an impressive 92% accuracy. (Image credit: F. Beauducel; research credit: F. Beauducel et al.; via Gizmodo)
Meteor dropping behind Mayon Volcano in the Philippines on May 25, 2026
New Eruption in the Bismarck Sea
A fresh space update is giving scientists and engineers another useful data point, the kind that can matter long after the launch photo or mission headline fades. The value of space work is often delayed. The public moment is the mission update; the real payoff comes from the data, the engineering lessons and the experiments that follow. Continue reading New Eruption in the Bismarck Sea
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I remember this Sunday morning….our whole family was in total shock ….😳…..we were eating breakfast….this was happening in Washington. We all ran outside to see…but too many clouds looking South…couldn’t see anything…we ran to the t.v. …..Seeing the rivers blasting with trees and hot mud….flooding and breaking bridges…damage in a massive scale…on the television live….and the famous helicopter footage….was a new experience for us in 1980.
Luckily the ash cloud went east not north…sparing Seattle and most populated areas. I think you can still buy ash samples from that, I bought one…kept it for 30 years and lost it somehow. One of those days you will always remember, and share your experience with other people who were there at a safe distance and saw it happen.
May 18th 1980 Richard Lasher took this picture of Mount St. Helens erupting.
Volcan Islande
RUFF Etienne