이걸로 처음 안 사고여서 찾아보니 올해가 40주년이어서 미국 언론에서는 기획 기사도 많이 냈더군요. 화산이 예상 외로 옆쪽으로 터지면서 피해가 커졌다고. https://t.co/7x028fwgzq
— 나가토 유키 (@nagato708) May 19, 2020
40 year anniversary of Mt ST Helens eruption ? https://t.co/td6WgNmla0
— Mrs Orsi (@Mgs_geog) May 18, 2020
"The energy that came out of Mount St. Helens that day is bigger than any nuclear weapon than we have in our arsenal." -- Steve Olson.
— Matthew Smith (@MattSmithKIRO7) May 18, 2020
40 years ago at this exact minute Mt. Saint Helen's erupted. #MSH40 https://t.co/3brfbcpzE2
40 Years Today, Mount St. Helens Erupted Creating The Largest Landslide In Recorded History. 57 People Died.
— Kelly ツ (@kellwoohoo) May 17, 2020
Revisiting the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens https://t.co/fE1uhRpFvV
40 years ago today Mount St Helen's erupted. People were warned in advance but they refused to believe the experts. 57 people died. Same thing is happening with #Covid19 but almost 90,000 have died and still people believe @realdonaldtrump.https://t.co/WGZyGIJL3H
— UFB (@Unfreakin) May 18, 2020
Did we learn all the lessons we could from this 40-year-old calamity? https://t.co/UkwtW9giFQ
— Lance Ulanoff (@LanceUlanoff) May 17, 2020
good day to remember that time GOP'er Bobby Jindal questioned the need for "something called volcano monitoring" https://t.co/LOedK8Kle2
— doug ?♂️? (@dropstones) May 18, 2020
Scoff science at your own risk. "The Mount St. Helens Eruption Was the Volcanic Warning We Needed." https://t.co/TgpvwAWRn2
— Chris Fisher (@FisherSpeaks) May 19, 2020
The Mount St. Helens Eruption Was the Volcanic Warning We Needed https://t.co/Gz3CuDCNWN
— Third Pod from the Sun (@ThirdPod) May 18, 2020
We chatted w/ @USGS @USGSVolcanoes volcanic seismologist Seth Moran about the eruption & monitoring moving forward https://t.co/mu7cHEPuvJ #SciComm #MtStHelens pic.twitter.com/71cNFZDlha
the mt saint helens eruption 40 years ago .... bananas https://t.co/Vow0WCdpYJ
— Brian Resnick (@B_resnick) May 19, 2020
An echo from 40 years ago: "Scientists had to continually persuade the authorities to restrict access to all but essential staff. Some groups protested, pointing to the impact the no-go zones were having on the local economy." https://t.co/RgNduzzL3E
— Daniel Trugman (@dtrugman2) May 18, 2020
MAY 18, 1980: Former @EcologyWA employee & geologist Keith Stoffel, flying over the north face of Mount St. Helens saw it "transform into a fluid — rippling, pulsating, churning. Then it collapsed, shearing 1,300 feet off the summit in seconds." NYT ?https://t.co/e1CXky9Ns1 pic.twitter.com/W6v25Airoz
— @EcologyWA (@EcologyWA) May 18, 2020
40 years ago, the eruption of Mount St. Helens impacted the world.
— NPR (@NPR) May 19, 2020
One NPR correspondent retells the story of the biggest blast in modern U.S. history — and reminds us all that these eruptions could happen at any time. https://t.co/nsSFTlE9mH
40 years ago, the eruption of Mount St. Helens affected the world.
— NPR (@NPR) May 18, 2020
Howard Berkes, who covered the eruption for NPR, retells the story of the biggest blast in the U.S.'s modern history — and reminds us all that these eruptions could happen at any time. https://t.co/PjrD7kKSPO
'It Seemed Apocalyptic' 40 Years Ago When Mount St. Helens Erupted : NPR https://t.co/9m2XvfRgoM
— Mike McDonald (@BCMikeMcD) May 18, 2020
40 years ago today, Mt St Helens scorched & flattened forests, buried valleys, blotted out the sun for 100's of miles & left 57 dead. My look back, with my reporting then and since. #MountStHelens https://t.co/yyQUzqQOnq
— Howard Berkes (@hberkes) May 18, 2020
On this day 1980
— Indigenous (@AmericanIndian8) May 18, 2020
Eruption Of Mount St. Helens 'Seemed Apocalyptic' 40 years ago https://t.co/uvh50OChyD #INDIGENOUS #TAIRP @hberkes @NPR pic.twitter.com/PhKyQHJaKw
'It Seemed Apocalyptic' 40 Years Ago When Mount St. Helens Erupted https://t.co/AhImDXxdK9
— NPR Science Desk (@nprscience) May 18, 2020
“I rushed to my radio station and its clacking Associated Press wire machine and pulled up a pile of wire copy from the floor.
— KQED Science (@KQEDscience) May 19, 2020
The reports coming in from southwest Washington state were hard to believe:”
More from @NPR: https://t.co/ZYI208cMph
This is a great article @NatureNews BUT you interview MEN (1 in 8 female) and NOT A SINGLE scientist outside North America Or Europe despite discussing global volcanism. Please REPRESENT global advance with global endeavours. https://t.co/lwXgHkDejI
— JenniBarclay (@VolcanoJenni) May 19, 2020
For those who spy on volcanoeshttps://t.co/bJ0q9LthAJ
— Ben Black (@magmatist) May 19, 2020
here is a new assignment... (that is hopefully not going to self-destruct? But instead will lead to a harmonious team of worldwide volcano spies working together to preserve peace?) https://t.co/ypztsMatUy
The new science of volcanoes harnesses AI, satellites and gas sensors to forecast eruptions https://t.co/vU05D4OcOE pic.twitter.com/cVVNJYQrbc
— IGEO (CSIC-UCM) (@IGeociencias) May 19, 2020
xkcd: 세인트헬렌스산. 1980년 5월 화산폭발로 산이 약 400m 허물어졌음을 보인 그래프. title은 ‘좋은 산이지만 ‘80년대에 정점peak를 찍었죠’ y축이 8000피트부터 시작하는 게 불편하다는 유머 섞인 덧글에서 웃었습니다. https://t.co/xQs5oGBuQS
— 나가토 유키 (@nagato708) May 19, 2020
Three people shared their memories of the eruption of Mount St. Helens for this story: one who had no idea what was happening, one who knew *very well* what was happening, and a third who grew up to study whether it might happen again. https://t.co/ESE33YxuWe
— Rhianna Schmunk (@rhiannaschmunk) May 18, 2020
The eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980, did untold damage and sent volcanic ash over B.C., Alberta and even Saskatchewan. Two Canadians who were nearby share their memories of that fateful day. https://t.co/AM6opQAcow
— CBC British Columbia (@cbcnewsbc) May 18, 2020
“An unforgettable day in May.
— Durham Volcanology (@Durham_Volc) May 18, 2020
The eruption of Mt St Helens on May 18, 1980, did untold damage and sent volcanic ash over B.C., Alberta and even Saskatchewan. Two Canadians who were nearby share their memories of that fateful day.”https://t.co/XYidyUk1Px pic.twitter.com/DjyH52XYrp
An unforgettable day. The eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980, did untold damage and sent volcanic ash over B.C., Alberta and even Saskatchewan https://t.co/KFqeGOhKQF
— Canadian Geographers (@CanGeographers) May 18, 2020
An unforgettable day in Mayhttps://t.co/GGPlnImssh pic.twitter.com/NvUsRyMLz5
— ⚠️ Damn Interesting (@DamnInteresting) May 17, 2020
An Unforgettable Day in May https://t.co/UWqcuM8WvV
— Emmett Macfarlane (@EmmMacfarlane) May 17, 2020
"Forty Years Later, Lessons for the Pandemic From Mount St. Helens" por Lawrence Roberts via NYT https://t.co/el42iaBGGS pic.twitter.com/DDDeSjvO3z
— Roberto Betancourt A. (@betancourt_phd) May 17, 2020
40 years ago today, MT. St. Helens erupted -- sending a column of ash 15 miles high, blooming into a mushroom cloud 35 miles wide.
— Steve Milloy (@JunkScience) May 18, 2020
Young geologist killed by eruption fail to heed his own warning. Only had time to report the eruption.https://t.co/oNo2awnszh
Forty Years Later, Lessons for the Pandemic From Mount St. Helens https://t.co/wLc7jksmmK
— Tim Hogan (@TimInHonolulu) May 18, 2020
Thousands were spared death at Mount St. Helens when the gov't chose to believe scientific experts. 57 died-many who chose not to believe experts. 40 years later we have @realdonaldtrump who thinks he is the expert on everything & 90,000 dead.https://t.co/cme9HHVgcH
— UFB (@Unfreakin) May 18, 2020
"There’s pieces of rebar that form the boundaries of plots I pounded in when I was 22 years old. I’m 62 now, and I’ve returned to those plots every year... I have gone and said hello, greeted that same exact plant every year for 39 years." https://t.co/k7UyWjMsj0
— ScienceInsider (@ScienceInsider) May 18, 2020
See images from one of the most destructive volcanic eruptions in U.S. history. https://t.co/6A6BzcwzBk
— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) May 18, 2020
Photos show Mount St. Helens historic eruption: Cars sunk in volcanic ash, people wearing masks https://t.co/DAnMBxbUqX
— Jeffrey Levin (@jilevin) May 18, 2020
The Mount St. Helens Eruption Was the Volcanic Warning We Needed https://t.co/jzsAMQIPPB
— Karen Chestney (@KarenChestney) May 19, 2020
Excellent read for my @anuearthscience EMSC2022 class learning about #volcanic hazards from a geophysical perspective this week. New science of volcanoes harnesses AI, satellites & gas sensors to forecast eruptions https://t.co/7wiRvzqDHg @scienceANU
— Dr. Meghan S. Miller (@MeghanSMiller) May 19, 2020
To learn more about #volcano forecasting today, 40 years after Mount St Helens, @JanePalmerComms has you covered https://t.co/LhRTNKjf4E
— Alexandra Witze (@alexwitze) May 18, 2020