MOUNT RAINIER
GEOLOGY & WEATHER
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Forest-floor burial in 1507 by the largest Mount Rainier lahar of the past millennium

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Author(s): Bryan A. Black, Patrick T. Pringle, James W. Vallance

Category: PUBLICATION
Document Type:
Publisher: Geology
Published Year: 2025
Volume:
Number:
Pages:
DOI Identifier: 10.1130/G53721.1
ISBN Identifier:
Keywords:

Abstract:
New dating of lahar-killed trees underscores volcano hazards in the Puget Sound metropolitan area. Beginning as a landslide from the west flank of Mount Rainier, Washington, USA, the Electron Mudflow, which was the largest lahar of the last millennium, swept more than 60 km down the Puyallup River drainage into areas now densely populated. Wiggle matching of seven radiocarbon ages from buried, bark-bearing Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) trees brackets the mudflow’s age between 1477 and 1522 CE with 99.7% certainty. To narrow this date, we applied dendrochronology crossdating on samples collected from 21 trees killed by the lahar, measuring 86 time series for statistical verification. The four bark-bearing trees died the same year while the final rings in all other trees had decayed, exposing rings formed in earlier years. When averaged together, the crossdated measurements form a 475 yr master chronology that was correlated against absolutely dated tree-ring chronologies in the region. The Electron chronology best matched with chronologies from low-elevation sites, especially a Douglas-fir chronology from Vancouver Island, Canada, to show that the Electron trees died in 1507 CE. Latewood in the final ring was beginning to form, indicating the mudflow likely occurred in the late-summer months. What caused the Electron Mudflow is unknown, but this precise date will help to assess possible relationships with other events, assist in interpreting Indigenous narratives about the mudflow, and increase awareness of potential lahar hazards.

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Suggested Citations:
In Text Citation:
Black and others (2025) or (Black et al., 2025)

References Citation:
Black, B.A., P.T. Pringle, and J.W. Vallance, 2025, Forest-floor burial in 1507 by the largest Mount Rainier lahar of the past millennium: Geology, doi: 10.1130/G53721.1.