After centuries lying dormant, this Alaska volcano is once again showing signs of life
CBC
After centuries of inactivity, a volcano in the Alaskan panhandle has awakened from dormancy.
Scientists have traced a swarm of minor earthquakes around Sitka, Alaska, in 2020 to magma activity below Mount Edgecumbe (L'úx Shaa), around 450 kilometres northwest of Prince Rupert, B.C.
Through computer modelling with satellite radar, scientists at the Alaska Volcano Observatory were able to pinpoint in April that the many small quakes were being caused by rising magma levels below the 976 metre-high peak at the southern end of remote Kruzof Island.
Despite the activity, scientists say an eruption is very unlikely, and no emergency protocols need to be put in place.
According to the observatory's findings released last month, the volcanic activity has been brewing since 2018 but remained undetected for several years due to minimal monitoring in the area.
Magma levels have risen by about 10 kilometres from a depth of 20 kilometres since around late 2014, said Ronni Grapenthin, associate professor of geodesy at the University of Alaska and lead author of the study.
The study says the rising magma pools have also caused deformations in the ground around the volcano — the most striking of which is centred just east of the mountain, where an area of around 17 kilometres in diameter has lifted nearly 27 centimetres in less than four years.
Grapenthin likened the rising magma to an inflating balloon.
"If you have magma that is moving to a shallower depth, it's moving into a space and adds pressure, then the surface on top of that would kind of gently move upwards," he said.
Mount Edgecumbe last erupted explosively about 4,000-5,000 years ago, according to Grapenthin. Oral histories from the Klingit Nation in Alaska also cite smaller explosive activity around 900 years ago.
Grapenthin says Edgecumbe is not going to erupt anytime soon.
"The magma is just going to continue to pool where it is and sit there happily. We see that happening a lot around volcanoes. Magma more often just moves to shallower depth and then doesn't erupt," he said.
The City of Prince Rupert said its emergency personnel had been made aware of the regional volcanic activity and has reviewed its emergency plans.
"At this point, there has been no local alert or hazard watch issued for our area," it said in a statement to CBC News.