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MOUNT St. HELENS is RECHARGING ! Scientists warn Volcano will erupt again within our lifetime !

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0:00

This is the side of Mount St. Helens

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blowing out 45 years ago. And this is

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where we think the next eruption will

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happen, which will be in our lifetime.

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By the way,

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>> what we're seeing at Mount St. Helens

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right now is we have these earthquake

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swarms, we have rising gas emissions,

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and the crater is growing from within.

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So, what's happening in this video, but

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it's not going to play out the way you

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might think. Here's what we know and why

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we're so confident it will happen. So,

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first of all, the when Mount St. Helens

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is an active, explosive, regularly

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scheduled volcano. It's erupted more

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than any other in the continental US

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over the past few centuries. And

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volcanoes like this tend to blow about

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once every 30 to 100 years. Something's

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recharging beneath Mount St. Helens

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right now on the west coast of the US at

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the Pacific Ring of Fire. So, what's

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going on there? I mean, we all remember

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Mount St. Alens and the catastrophic

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eruption in the 1980s. So scientists

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tell us they're watching it closely

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right now because deep below the crater

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of Mount St. Helens that blew its top

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off in the 1980s, the volcano is

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absolutely not quiet. It's building up

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pressure again and it can be seen. And

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again, as I said, the evidence is

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already there. Over the past month and

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over the past years, Mount St. Helens

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has been producing repeated earthquake

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swarms. I've reported about this. Like

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not super large earthquakes, but dozens

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sometimes hundreds of earthquakes, small

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ones, but for a volcano that means

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something, right? Most of these

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earthquakes, they were so weak um you

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could never feel them, but that doesn't

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mean that something isn't happening at

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Mount St. Helens. So that's exactly ex I

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have to say what makes these earthquakes

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so dangerous because this type of

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activity is not caused by shifting

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tectonic plates. I mean Mount St. Helens

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is along the Cascadia subduction zone

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along subduction zones. We do have all

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these volcanoes but if it shakes right

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underneath the volcano it's not the

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subduction zone. So and here is where it

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gets real. So listen carefully. Before

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you do, please leave a like and a hype

2:12

for this video. It helps my channel and

2:14

it doesn't cost you anything. So, thank

2:16

you. And if you're new here, subscribe.

2:18

I would like to see you again. So, let's

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go back to the 2000s. If you think in

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the 1980s that was the last time we

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heard of Mount St. Helens, you're

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absolutely wrong. Between February and

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June 2024 alone, we had 350 earthquakes

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that were recorded. And at one point

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activity peaked at 38 earthquakes in a

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single week. And we did have earthquake

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swarms in 2025.

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So almost all of them tiny but happening

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at depth of roughly

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3 to 5 miles 5 to 7 kilometers beneath

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the crater of Mount St. Helens. That is

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right where the magma system exists.

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So is magma causing this? Right? That's

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the big question. What is causing this?

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Because earthquakes like this, they

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don't just happen randomly. They usually

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are triggered because there's pressure

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changes underground at the volcano. We

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have fluids that are moving through

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cracks. We have gas building up. And in

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some cases, magma is slowly shifting

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through the whole system, the plumbing

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system of the volcano, how we call it.

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>> Volcanoes like this tend to blow about

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once every 30 to 100 years. Yep, we're

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getting into that window. But here's the

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thing. These eruptions don't come out of

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nowhere. Scientists will see it coming.

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>> Kind of highlighted that these things

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don't necessarily occur out of the blue

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because there had been this swarm of

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earthquakes um around the volcano. That

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indicated that uh molten magma was

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moving up the throat of the volcano. And

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the other thing that was uh kind of

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ominous was the volcano was swelling. I

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think you know at that point they issued

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an evacuation.

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>> That was 1980 but Mount St. Helens is

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still very much alive. Just last June

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there was another spike in earthquake

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activity. Magma started moving again. It

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didn't reach the surface but scientists

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call this a recharging event. A sign

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that the system is priming itself. So

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yes, it will erupt again. And that that

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isn't new guys. This has been happening

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for years. So, in fact, scientists have

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now recorded, listen to this, over

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31,000 earthquakes beneath Mount St.

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Helens since 2008.

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31,000.

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Let that sink in. And I want to make

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clear that is not background noise. That

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is a volcanic system that is constantly

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adjusting to something that is happening

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below. But in order to understand what

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this really means and why this matters,

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we need to know something that most

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people completely miss. And that's

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important. My dog thinks that too if you

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hear him growling. So Eddie, please.

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Mount St. Helens didn't just erupt in

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1980. Yes, that eruption was

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catastrophic. Absolutely bad. 57 people

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were lost. It flattened forests for

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miles. We see these images last seconds

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before it happened sent ash across the

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whole United States. But s then after

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that something unexpected happened.

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You'll be surprised about the year.

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Maybe in 2004

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the volcano came back to life again. Not

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with a massive explosion. I mean it has

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already blown its top off. Also not with

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towering ash clouds but with something

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much quieter. and in some ways more

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dangerous. I have to say more dangerous.

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For four straight years, from 2004 to

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2008, Mount San Halen slowly pushed

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magma upwards through the system. Didn't

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explode. It extruded lava. Did you know

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that it did? Like thick solid rock,

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forcing its way out inside the crater,

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building a massive lava dome. So, we

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haven't seen dramatic headlines. We

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haven't seen global panic. It's just a

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volcano rebuilding itself from the

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inside. Correct or not? That's the

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question. So, that phase was ending in

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2008. And when it ended, it didn't mean

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the system was done. That's why we're

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talking about it today. It meant

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something else had started.

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That's what we have to recognize here.

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This is a longterm recharge phase that

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has started deep below the surface. So

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magma is generated around a depth of

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roughly 20 miles 25 kilometers. From

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there it slowly feeds into a reservoir

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that is much closer to the surface

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roughly I would say 4 to 10 kilometers

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down. That's roughly 2.7 to seven miles.

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And when that system then begins to

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pressurize the rock above it starts to

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respond because it's like if pressure is

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building up underneath the rocks above

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it they they feel the pressure they

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start to get brittle and they crack and

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that creates the earthquakes, right?

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It's shifting as well and that produces

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what we're seeing right now. persistent

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earthquake swarms, long-term internal

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movement, and a volcano that is anything

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but inactive. We have to say that. Now,

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here's the part where most people get it

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wrong. This does not mean an eruption is

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about to happen tomorrow, right now. And

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that's really important because Mount

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St. Helens has gone through similar

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phases before in the late 1980s and

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again in the 1990s. And those did not

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immediately lead to eruptions. But I

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also want to make clear with volcanoes,

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not each eruption is preparing and

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happening in the same way. There's room

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for a lot of surprises. So we can say

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because it didn't do that last time, it

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won't do this this time. So right now

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we're dealing with something slower,

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something quieter, and in some ways more

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concerning. How can that be? Because

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what we're dealing with right now, this

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is how volcanic systems rebuild, not

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with constant eruptions, but with long

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periods of silence while pressure is

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slowly increasing underground. And right

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now there are no strong surface

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