Ash plume from the cone vent at Veniaminof in visible (RGB) Planet satellite image. Minor steaming is visible in a depression east of the vent from an ice cauldron resulting from this eruption's flank vent. Recent (<2 days old) ash deposits are visible around the vent.

Ash plume from the cone vent at Veniaminof in visible (RGB) Planet satellite image. Minor steaming is visible in a depression east of the vent from an ice cauldron resulting from this eruption's flank vent. Recent (<2 days old) ash deposits are visible around the vent.

Date: Mar 21st, 2021
Volcano(es): Veniaminof
Photographer: Loewen, M. W.
URL: avo.alaska.edu/image/view/168811

Veniaminof 2021/2

Regional infrasound sensors detected a small explosion from Veniaminof volcano March 4, 2021 14:13 UTC (05:13 local time). Satellite and webcam views indicate low-elevation (< 10,000 ft asl) ash emissions heading in the SSE direction, and minor ash deposits are visible at the volcano. As a result, AVO raisedhe Aviation Color Code to ORANGE and the Volcano Alert Level to WATCH at Veniaminof volcano. The local seismic data remains offline due to an outage of a satellite link at Port Heiden. However, the Alaska Volcano Observatory continues to monitor Veniaminof with satellite and webcam data and remote infrasound, seismic and lightning networks.
By March 12, 2021, the eruption has produced ash emissions from the small cone in the summit caldera, in addition to lava effusion from a vent on the flank of this cone ~1 km (0.6 miles) east of the cone summit within the intracaldera glacier. Low-level plumes of volcanic ash have been observed at ~7,000-10,000 ft asl extending as far as 200 km (124 miles) downwind, leaving trace ash deposits within ~20 km (12.4 miles) of the vent to the northeast and southeast. Explosions corresponding to this activity have been detected on regional geophysical networks. Explosive activity declined March 10-12, with minor ash emissions only observed near the vent and no activity detected in regional geophysical data. No ashfall from this eruption has been reported in nearby communities. Retrospective analysis of satellite, web camera, and regional infrasound data has shown evidence that eruptive activity began by February 28, 2021, with minor ash emissions and a small melt pit forming in the glacier above the flank vent.

Planet imagery courtesy of UAF/GI

Full Resolution.