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Montserrat - volcano in paradise |
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This talk is very popular with schools as it tackles issues such as hazard geography, the impacts of natural disaster on local communities, and the difficulties of managing and predicting volcanic impacts. David can make this talk available on either 35mm slides, or as a digital presentation. There are more pictures in the Photo gallery. 'Volcanic activity on Montserrat'This is the text of an article David
wrote about Montserrat for an online travel and adventure
magazine: A large lorry drove past behind me as I sat in the
undergrowth jotting details of the frog I'd seen. A part of my brain
slowly registered that something was not right. "Hang on, there are
no roads around here". I turned around to see a wall of volcanic ash
a mile away heading down the valley towards me. It looked a text
book example of a pyroclastic flow/nuee ardente/hot ash avalanche,
take your pick. Typically travelling at speeds of 100 km/h, and with
temperatures exceeding 1,000oC I knew that I was going to be dead
very quickly. I recalled the 30,000 who died on Martinique in 1902
when Mt Pelee similarly erupted. Half a minute passed and the
billowing cloud of ash didn't get any closer. The summit of the
volcano was obscured by low cloud and I realised what must have
happened: the volcano had erupted, sending a column of ash upwards
which had then collapsed. What I had seen was the descending ash
escaping down the valleys radiating from the flanks of the volcano;
aided by gravity rather than driven by a lateral blast.
Either way it was the first major eruption of the Soufriere Hills volcano
since it had broken its 360 year silence a month before. I was part of a
team assessing the biodiversity of Montserrat, the Emerald Isle of the
Caribbean, but my degree was in geology and I knew enough to realise
that this eruption was significant. I broke off halfway through my 4
hour transect and headed back to the nearest road head, convinced an
evacuation would be called. I listened in to the local radio station at
the first village I came to. Nothing. The rest of the team joined me
from surveying their transects in today's 1 km2 field area. They were
clearly disappointed that I had abandoned my work, spoiling the dataset.
Was I overreacting I wondered? We drove back to the villa, and at four
that afternoon I was vindicated: the Governor came on air and declared
the first evacuation of this still volcanically troubled isle.
Like many overseas projects and expeditions, preparations for this trip
had started over a year before - there was no way anyone could have
anticipated the headline that greeted us in July 1995 as we landed at
Antigua for the short hop to Montserrat. "Montserrat volcano threatens
to erupt". The rest of the team were biologists and were suitably
distraught at this news. I too put on a grave face but my volcano loving
heart speeded up with excitement. This really was going to be an
interesting project!
Montserratians are a wonderful people; friendly, laid back, generous. And
we were in an unspoilt tropical paradise, "the Caribbean as it used to
be", in deference to its lack of development. We set to, slogging
through the bush day and night, catching and recording bats, amphibians
and reptiles. In the first few weeks we would catch the occasional smell
of sulphur, or a small quake would crack the plaster of our bedroom
walls. One pitch dark night on the flanks of the Soufriere Hills a sound
like several stationary jet engines marked the venting of gas from the
volcano.
As the situation worsened our sense of purpose was eroded; as we drove out
to our field areas each day, passing people who had lost their homes and
livelihoods, our work seemed a decadent irrelevance. Some days, as
tension built, we cried off altogether.
Juan, a freelance Spanish photographer who was recording our work, found
himself in the middle of an even more exciting story. He managed to
sweet talk the police at one of the roadblocks to let him through so he
could climb the volcano and get some shots. He was now looking for an
accomplice. Knowing I was a geologist with an interest in volcanoes he
figured I wouldn't need much persuading. I disappointed him. Like many
volcanoes it was being unpredictable and I figured there was a chance it
could erupt while we were on the summit. If it did, we could be killed.
Juan went alone the next day, and of course all was well and he got some
great shots. A few days later we went to a press briefing given by some
of the Royal Marines. They showed video footage they had taken as they
slogged up to place monitoring equipment on the summit. Suddenly as the
camera panned around the crater the soundtrack was overwhelmed with
noise, the screen went blank and all that could be heard were loud thuds
and muffled oaths. After 2 or 3 minutes the camera emerged from under
the body of a foetal Marine, its owner shouted that the volcano had just
erupted and the scene on the screen changed to a mad dash down the
slopes. Rocks the size of bowling balls had showered down around them -
they had a lucky escape from serious injury.
That first evacuation, including the capital Plymouth, caused a lot of
disruption. The volcano threatened the densely populated southern half of
the island. All its infrastructure, including emergency shelters, schools,
quays and the hospital built after Hurricane Hugo hit in 1989, were
abandoned. Displaced Montserratians moved in with friends or relatives in
the sparsely populated north, or crowded into churches or the tents put up
on a cricket pitch by the Royal Marines. The international team of
volcanologists flown in to monitor the situation created the Montserrat
Volcanoes Observatory in the Vue Point Hotel.
Seven years on and the latest scientific assessment predicts the volcano will
remain active for several years yet. The Exclusion Zone now covers more than
half the island, and if the dome continues to grow other areas will be at high
risk. The north is developing a substitute infrastructure and Montserratians,
who are deeply attached to their island, have taken pride in rebuilding their
lives.
Global volcanic activity has more than doubled since 1860. Volcanoes are an
intrinsic, if incompletely understood, part of the Earth's natural systems. As
populations grow and are forced to impinge on ever more marginal lands, we can
expect to see more suffer as a result of natural hazards. The UK threw material,
financial and moral support behind Montserrat - other parts of the world may not
be so lucky.
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