Abstract

Mid -winter flooding of the Drift River was caused by melting of snow and glacier ice during the 1989–90 eruption of Redoubt Volcano. “Drift” Glacier (unofficial name) was beheaded when 110 to 120 × 106m3of perennial snow and ice were mechanically entrained by the four largest volcanically initiated flows. The flow volumes were increased by incorporation of the seasonal snowpack on the lower glacier surface and in the flooded river valley. The seasonal snow contributed a volume equivalent to about 35 × 106m3of water to the flows, increasing the cumulative flood volume by almost 30%. No large amounts of meltwater were stored on or under the glacier before any of the flows took place. The threat of flooding was significantly reduced after the second major eruption removed the remainder of the easily erodible snow and ice.

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