USGS/Cascades Volcano Observatory,
Vancouver, Washington
DESCRIPTION:
Electron Mudflow, Mount Rainier, Washington
[Map,20K,InlineGIF]
Extent of the Osceola and Electron
Mudflows
-- Modified from: Crandell, et.al., 1979
From: Hoblitt, et.al., 1998, Volcano Hazards from Mount Rainier, Washington,
Revised 1998: USGS Open-File Report 98-428
- The largest lahar
originating at Mount Rainier in the last 10,000 years is known as the Osceola
Mudflow. ... At least 6 smaller debris avalanches have spawned lahars in
the past 5,600 years. One of these, the Electron Mudflow, which was
derived from a slope failure on the west flank of Mount Rainier about 600
years ago, has not been correlated with an eruption. The Electron
Mudflow was more than 30 meters (yards) deep where it entered the Puget
Sound lowland at the community of Electron. Its deposits at Orting are as much
as 6 meters (yards) thick and contain remnants of an old-growth forest.
From: Wood and Kienle, 1990, Volcanoes of North America: United States and
Canada: Cambridge University Press, 354p., p.158-160, Contribution by Patrick
Pringle
- Mount Rainier, the highest and third most voluminous volcano in the
Cascade Range, is potentially the most dangerous volcano in the range because
of the large population living around its lowland drainages. These areas are
at risk because of the mountain's great relief and the huge area and volume of
ice and snow on the cone (92x10^6 square meters, and 4.4x10^9 cubic meters,
respectively) that could generate lahars
during eruptions. In addition, large (>2x10^8 cubic meters) sector
collapses of clay-rich, hydrothermally altered debris from the cone have
occurred at least 3 times in the last 6,000 years (
Osceola, Round
Pass, and Electron mudflows. ...
- Another clay-rich lahar, the Electron Mudflow, has been dated at
530 Carbon-14 years B.P. This lahar, which evidently began as a failure of
part of the western edifice, has not been correlated with any eruptive
activity at Mount Rainier and may have occurred without precursory eruptive
phenomena. The Electron Mudflow apparently was very fluid and underwent
minimal downstream attenuation of discharge. This is demonstrated
approximately 36 kilometers west of Mount Rainier where the Electron
was still about 30 meters deep as it exited the Cascade mountain front and
flowed onto the Puget Lowland. ...
- NOTE: Woods and Kienle article (contribution by Patrick
Pringle) states 60 meters deep, corrected to 30 meters deep via request of
Patrick Pringle, May 1998
From: Scott and Vallance, 1995, Debris Flow, Debris Avalanche, and Flood
Hazards At and Downstream from Mount Rainier, Washington: Hydrologic
Investigations Atlas HA-729
- ... the Electron Mudflow which occurred about 550 radiocarbon years
ago in both forks of the Puyallup River. There is no evidence of association
of the flow with eruptive activity. Although less than one-tenth of the volume
of the Osceola,
the Electron Mudflow inundated at least 36 square kilometers of Puget
Sound Lowland. Because of post-settlement deforestation and the consequent
changes in the hydraulic roughness of flood plains, a modern lahar of similar
volume and rheology would flow faster and inundate a larger area.
- The mean peak velocity of the Electron Mudflow was about 20 meters
per second at the boundary of the lowland, and an average velocity of about 22
meters per second is estimated between Mount Rainier and that point. An
equivalent maximum celerity if 79 kilometers per hour (49 miles per hour). ...
From: Scott and Vallance, 1993, WATER FACT SHEET: History of Landslides and
Debris Flows at Mount Rainier, Washington: USGS Open-File Report 93-111
- ... Several large flows in the Puyallup River drainage originated from the
Sunset Amphitheater. The most typical example is the Electron Mudflow.
Deposits of that flow, which occurred about 500 years ago, form the valley
surface around Orting.
From: Driedger, 1986, A Visitor's Guide to Mount Rainier Glaciers: Pacific
Northwest National Parks and Forests Association, p.43.
- Puyallup Glacier originates in Sunset Amphitheatre near the summit (of
Mount Rainier) on the mountain's northwest side. One theory suggests that the
Electron Mudflow resulted from a cliff collapse to form this grandiose
cirque. ...
From: Crandell, 1971, Postglacial Lahars from Mount Rainier Volcano,
Washington: USGS Professional Paper 677, 73p.
- The Electron Mudflow was named from Electron, a small community
beside the Puyallup River at the west margin of the Cascade Range (Crandell,
1963b, p.A50). Remnants of the mudflow underlie much of the valley floor from
Electron northward to the outskirts of Sumner. The mudflow is an unsorted
mixture of subangular to subrounded rock fragments in a purplish-gray matrix
of sand, silt, and clay. it generally exhibits a size gradation upward from
coarse material at the base to fine material at the top. ...
- A wood fragment obtained from the mudflow near Electron had a radiocarbon
age of 530+/-200 years (Crandell, 1963b, P.A51). When corrected, this age is
about 600 years. ...
- The Electron Mudflow underlies about 14 square miles of the
Puyallup River valley in the Puget Sound lowland. In this area its thickness
ranges from a few inches to more than 26 feet; it is generally about 15 feet
thick from McMillin southward to a point 2 miles south of Orting. If an
average thickness of 15 feet is assumed for the area beyond the mountain
front, the deposit has a volume of a little more than 200 million cubic yards.
An additional amount of unknown area and volume lies between the lowland and
its source, 22 miles away, on the west flank of Mount Rainier.
- The clay-mineral content of the Electron Mudflow suggests an origin
like that proposed for the other clayey mudflows from Mount Rainier; thus, the
Electron probably was caused by massive slides of moist, hydrothermally
altered rock. These slides may have been triggered by an earthquake or by a
volcanic explosion.
- The Electron Mudflow may have occurred at a time when the volcano
was dormant, for we have found no deposits that indicate an eruption about 600
years ago.
From: Scott, Pringle, and Vallance, 1992, Sedimentology, Behavior, and
Hazards of Debris Flows at Mount Rainier, Washington: USGS Open-File Report
90-385
- The Electron Mudflow, as interpreted by Crandell (1963, p.69),
dammed the drainage of Kapowsin Creek to form Lake Kapowsin. The
lake has a maximum depth of 9 meters (Crandell, 1963), which is deep for a
lahar-margin lake (Scott, 1986) and suggests that the strength of the flow was
significant (Johnson, 1984, equation 8.6c). The original flow margin may or
may not have had that much relief, however, according to local residents, the
lake level has risen substantially in the last century due to outlet blockage,
either natural or constructed.
Electron
Mudflow - Crandell, 1971
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03/29/01, Lyn Topinka