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| Title | Fissures in front of throat of volcano where hot volcanic gases were being emitted |
| Photographer | Zoller, William |
| Publisher | University of Washington. Dept. of Chemistry |
| Date of photograph | 1980-07 |
| Notes | As the originated magma was being forced up, it cracked the rock allowing radio lines of vents to be formed. Each of the vents are producing yellow sulfur around them. These are little vents, and are what would be called pressure cracks. As the lava came up through that throat, it would kind of force the volcano itself to split in cracks. Gases would come out these cracks, giving the yellow deposits which you can see along them. This would obviously be the sulfur systems. Fortunately for us, they were not sulfur, but these new minerals that we had totally misdiagnosed and were discovered by undergraduate students. |
| Subjects (LCSH) | Magmas sulfur Volcanic gases
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| Subjects (Chem Abstracts) | CASRN 7704-34-9
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| Coverage | United States -- Washington(State) -- Saint Helens, Mount |
| Digital Collection | Mt. St. Helens Post-Eruption Database |
| Slide ID Number | zolmsh50 |
| Contact Info | To inquire about permissions, contact Dr. Bill Zoller at:zoller@u.washington.edu |
| Copyright statement | William Zoller. Database is intended for educational and instructional use; if you cite or download images, please acknowledge appropriately. |
| Type | image |