System for Ranking Relative Threats of U.S. Volcanoes

  • Ewert J
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Abstract

A methodology to systematically rank volcanic threat was developed as the basis for prioritizing volcanoes for long-term hazards evaluations, monitoring, and mitigation activities. A ranking of 169 volcanoes in the United States and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands U.S. volcanoes is presented based on scores assigned for various hazard and exposure factors. Fifteen factors define the hazard: Volcano type, maximum known eruptive explosivity, magnitude of recent explosivity within the past 500 and 5,000 years, average eruption-recurrence interval, presence or potential for a suite of hazardous phenomena pyroclastic flows, lahars, lava flows, tsunami, flank collapse, hydrothermal explosion, primary lahar, and deformation, seismic, or degassing unrest. Nine factors define exposure: a measure of ground-based human population in hazard zones, past fatalities and evacuations, a measure of airport exposure, a measure of human population on aircraft, the presence of power, transportation, and developed infrastructure, and whether or not the volcano forms a significant part of a populated island. The hazard score and exposure score for each volcano are multiplied to give its overall threat score. Once scored, the ordered list of volcanoes is divided into five overall threat categories from very high to very low.

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Ewert, J. W. (2007). System for Ranking Relative Threats of U.S. Volcanoes. Natural Hazards Review, 8(4), 112–124. https://doi.org/10.1061/(asce)1527-6988(2007)8:4(112)

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