Christinia Heliker will discuss her work at Mount St. Helens during a presentation Saturday in Port Townsend. United States Geological Survey work is shown here within the mountain’s crater. Mount Rainier is shown in the distance.

Christinia Heliker will discuss her work at Mount St. Helens during a presentation Saturday in Port Townsend. United States Geological Survey work is shown here within the mountain’s crater. Mount Rainier is shown in the distance.

Geologist to tell of working in the crater of Mount St. Helens

PORT TOWNSEND — Geologist Christina Heliker of Sequim will tell about her work at Mount St. Helens — which began shortly after its cataclysmic eruption May 18, 1980 — when she presents a lecture at 4 p.m. Saturday.

Heliker’s one-hour lecture will be at the First Baptist Church, 1202 Lawrence St., in uptown Port Townsend. It is sponsored by Jefferson Land Trust’s Geology Group (quimpergeology.org).

It is free and open to the public; donations of $5 are appreciated to defray expenses.

Following the big blast at Mount St. Helens, five smaller eruptions produced pyroclastic flows. Using traditional (pre-GPS) surveying techniques, Heliker was part of the “deformation crew” that measured inflation of the volcano’s flanks prior to each eruption as a means of predicting new activity.

By 1981, her fieldwork moved inside the crater. She measured changes to the lava dome before it erupted over the next several years.

During those trips, she collected samples of dome lava that contained inclusions of “foreign” rocks incorporated into magma as it rose through the crust. These samples became the focus of her graduate work.

According to Heliker, ash bursts from the dome, swarms of micro-earthquakes and constant rockfalls from the rim made crater fieldwork exhilarating.

More recently, she has revisited the crater, hiking to the toe of the fast-growing glacier wrapping around the dome.

Her presentation will include an update on current conditions at Mount St. Helens, nearly 40 years after the big eruption.

Heliker spent most of her career working for the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) on active volcanoes. Her first job with USGS, however, was working on glaciers from an office in Tacoma.

When Mount St. Helens erupted in May 1980, Heliker quickly transferred to a Vancouver office that soon became the Cascades Volcano Observatory. She worked there for the next four years while completing a master’s degree at Western Washington University in Bellingham.

In 1984, she moved to USGS’s Hawaiian Volcano Observatory on the Big Island, where she monitored the 35-year eruption of Kilauea until her retirement.

Heliker returned to the Northwest in 2012, settling in Sequim, where she spends her time hiking and snowshoeing in the Olympic Mountains and working on photography.

More in News

Christopher Thomsen, portraying Santa Claus, holds a corgi mix named Lizzie on Saturday at the Airport Garden Center in Port Angeles. All proceeds from the event were donated to the Peninsula Friends of Animals. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Santa Paws

Christopher Thomsen, portraying Santa Claus, holds a corgi mix named Lizzie on… Continue reading

Peninsula lawmakers await budget

Gov. Ferguson to release supplemental plan this month

Clallam County looks to pass deficit budget

Agency sees about 7 percent rise over 2025 in expenditures

Officer testifies bullet lodged in car’s pillar

Witness says she heard gunfire at Port Angeles park

A copper rockfish caught as part of a state Department of Fish and Wildlife study in 2017. The distended eyes resulted from a pressure change as the fish was pulled up from a depth of 250 feet. (David B. Williams)
Author to highlight history of Puget Sound

Talk at PT Library to cover naming, battles, tribes

Vern Frykholm, who has made more than 500 appearances as George Washington since 2012, visits with Dave Spencer. Frykholm and 10 members of the New Dungeness Chapter, NSDAR, visited with about 30 veterans on Nov. 8, just ahead of Veterans Day. (New Dungeness Chapter DAR)
New Dungeness DAR visits veterans at senior facilities

Members of the New Dungeness Chapter, National Society Daughters of… Continue reading

Festival of Trees contest.
Contest: Vote for your favorite tree online

Olympic Medical Center Foundation’s Festival of Trees event goes through Dec. 25

“Angel” Alleacya Boulia, 26, of St. Louis, Mo., was last seen shopping in Port Angeles on Nov. 17, National Park Service officials said. Her rented vehicle was located Sunday at the Sol Duc trailhead in Olympic National Park. (National Park Service)
National Park Service asks for help in locating missing woman

Rented vehicle located Sunday at Sol Duc trailhead

Kendra Russo of Found and Foraged Fibers in Anacortes holds a mirror as Jayne Johnson of Sequim tries on a skirt during a craft fair on Saturday in Uptown Port Townsend. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Mirror image

Kendra Russo of Found and Foraged Fibers in Anacortes holds a mirror… Continue reading

Flu cases rising on Peninsula

COVID-19, RSV low, health official says

Clallam board approves levy amounts for taxing districts

Board hears requests for federal funding, report on weed control

Jury selected in trial for attempted murder

Man allegedly shot car with 2 people inside