[Uwhistory] Fw: Mt. St. Helens Twenty-fifth Anniversary Public Lecture

Cheryl Fisk cfisk at u.washington.edu
Mon May 23 17:12:57 PDT 2005


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Kai Fujita 
To: Chairs ; Admins 
Sent: Monday, May 23, 2005 4:52 PM
Subject: FW: Mt. St. Helens Twenty-fifth Anniversary Public Lecture


forwarding as requested.  please spread the word!


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Michael Brown [mailto:chair at ess.washington.edu] 
Sent: Monday, May 23, 2005 16.35
To: Kai Fujita
Subject: Mt. St. Helens Twenty-fifth Anniversary Public Lecture


For distribution to all departments in Arts and Sciences:


Thank you






Mt. St. Helen-what's next?


When will the next big eruption occur?  How big will it be?  How much warning will we have?  Which way will the ash go?  How are people in harm's way notified?  What about Mt. Rainier?


Join us for an evening public lecture presented by Earth and Space Sciences Research Professor, Steve Malone.  Steve is an excellent and enjoyable speaker and will leave time for your questions and answers.


Kane Hall, room 120; Wednesday, June 1st, 7 to 8:30 pm.


Limited seating; please register at
geolecture at ess.washington.edu or at 206-685-2821.
For more info:  http://geomapnw.ess.washington.edu.




Steve Malone is the Director of the Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network,  providing real-time seismic data to improve our response time to- and geologic understanding of- volcanic and earthquake events.  He has studied Mt. St. Helens for over 25 years and considers the mountain "his volcano".  He is the principal scientist responsible for the seismic monitoring of Mt. St. Helens and other Cascade volcanos, and has been quite involved with the seismic prediction of past eruptions at St. Helens and the study of the volcanic conduit system using seismic data. More recently he has been investigating various aspects of the volcanic hazards of Mount Rainier and Mount Hood.


For more info about Dr. Malone:
http://www.ess.washington.edu/People/faculty_bio/malone-bio.html





____________________________________________________

Michael Brown

Professor and Chair

Department of Earth and Space Sciences

Condon Hall 338

P.O. Box 351310

University of Washington

Seattle, WA 98195-1310




206 616 6058

206 543 0489 (fax)

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