Conversations That Matter: Volcanoes in our backyard
Credit to Author: Massey Padgham| Date: Fri, 16 Aug 2019 23:10:46 +0000
At 3:30 a.m. on Aug. 6, 2010, the ground in Lil’wat and Pemberton started shaking. People were woken, an emergency call went out and residents were told, in essence, ro run. Run as fast and as far as you can because the mountain just over the horizon was crashing down into the valley.
The southern peak of Mount Meager had collapsed. That triggered a series of rockfalls that crashed into the weak and heavily saturated south flank on the mountain. The weight of the rocks and the impact destabilized a huge amount of rock, dirt, mud, trees and anything else in its path.
The debris cascaded down seven kilometres of Capricorn Creek and dammed up Meager Creek. Over the next 19 hours, water poured into the makeshift dam creating a lake. The dam didn’t hold and when it let go, the water rushed toward Pemberton faster than anyone could run.
No one knew it was coming. The Mount Meager slide is comparable in size to the Hope slide and no one knew it was about to happen.
We invited volcanologist Glyn Williams-Jones of SFU’s earth sciences department to join us for a Conversation That Matters about the program he and a complex web of other scientists are putting in place that will be an early warning system when Mount Meager decides to change its shape again.
Conversations That Matter is a partner program for the Centerefor Dialogue at Simon Fraser University. The production of this program is made possible thanks to the support of the following and viewers like you. Please become a Patreon subscriber and support the production of this program, with a $1 pledge here goo.gl/ypXyDs