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Grumpy volcano concerns

Climate change is causing glaciers atop Mount Meager in British Columbia to shrink, increasing the chances of landslides and even a new eruption, says an expert studying the volcano.

Glyn Williams-Jones, a volcanologist from Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., has been studying the fumaroles, or gas venting, of water vapour, carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulphide from the volcano for about two years. He and his team of students are also examining the increased risk of landslides caused by receding glaciers on the volcano.

Williams-Jones said the release of the gases worries him.

"The reason those fumaroles are coming, we believe now, is not because the volcano is more active but rather because of warming climate ... those glaciers have been getting thinner," he said. "There is this interplay between climate, ice-covered volcano and the response of those volcanoes."

The churning gases don't mean an eruption is imminent, he said, but the volcano is definitely not extinct.

Mount Meager is northwest of Whistler and was the last volcano in British Columbia to have a large explosive eruption, which was 2,400 years ago.

"That's a blink of an eye in geological terms," Williams-Jones said.

Volcanoes have their own characteristics and personalities, he said.

"It is a grumpy volcano in the sense that it has had some very large eruptions and also had these extremely large landslides. So I'd say yes, it's on the grumpy side."

Mount Meager has been forming over the last two million years, so it can be thought of as "multiple volcanoes old," each sitting on top of each other, he said.

A landslide in 2010 from Mount Meager unleashed about 53 million cubic metres of rock and created a dam on Meager Creek about 300 metres wide and two kilometres long.

About 5,000 people downstream were evacuated because of the threat of a rapid release of the lake that formed behind the dam.

William-Jones said it's possible the next landslide could be 10 times that size, with the greatest threat to residents of the Pemberton Valley.

If that happens, the change in pressure could destabilize the magma chamber beneath the volcano leading to an eruption, he said.

There is no "mouth of hell" with a big, glowing, red or orange mass of lava, he said.

"What you're looking at is this inclined opening with steam and gas pouring out. And melting water from the ice pouring down into it," he said.



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