B1 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, MAY 21, 2022 CONTACT US FOLLOW US Lissa Brewer lbrewer@dailyastorian.com facebook.com/ DailyAstorian Mount St. Helens erupted May 18, 1980, sending millions of tons of ash skyward. Much of it landed on farmland, destroying or damaging many crops. IN THE MOUNTAIN’S SHADOW Refl ecting on Mount St. Helens through a local journey it can be seen from nearly anywhere on the river, sport- ing varied cloaks. It reigns over the landscape, silent and peaceful for now. ccording to the Klickitat people, the creator had spo- The catastrophic eruption of May 18, 1980, changed ken. He was furious with his sons, who led his peo- everything. The classic Cascadian dome, considered by ple to opposite sides of the great river. many to be the most beautiful of the Cascade stratovol- Wy’east and Pahto led war- canoes, was blown off in one of the riors against one another over the deadliest and most destructive volca- THE CATASTROPHIC love of Loo-wit, a woman who could nic events in American history. This not decide between the two. Seeing was not the fi rst time the mountain- ERUPTION OF MAY his people perish at the hands of their had blown its top. Geologic records own kin, the creator fl ew into a rage, reveal many more, and many I ndig- 18, 1980, CHANGED casting all three into stone in the form enous tribes have told stories about EVERYTHING. THE of the great fi re mountains that domi- its fi ery events. Not many alive at nate the horizon, so the legend tells. the time will forget where they were CLASSIC CASCADIAN The Cowlitz, Yakama, Multnomah when the mountain lost its temper. and Chinook tribes gave their own Most lower Columbia locations DOME, CONSIDERED names and stories to the towering had a dusting of fi ne, gritty ash, but BY MANY TO BE THE peaks. When Capt. George Vancouver the blast was to the north and the pre- entered the Columbia, he gave two vailing winds buried the lands north- MOST BEAUTIFUL of them names that he thought would east of the blast zone in as much as serve him best in the British Royal 5 inches of ash. The blast zone was OF THE CASCADE Navy. devastated. Trees were incinerated STRATOVOLCANOES, Wy’east became Mount Hood, in seconds and millions of logs from after Adm. Samuel Hood, and Loo- surrounded forests washed down the WAS BLOWN OFF wit became Mount . St. Helens after Toutle and Cowlitz rivers before fi ll- IN ONE OF THE the ambassador to the Spanish court ing the Columbia, along with a mix- Baron St. Helens. Pahto, now known ture of ash and pyroclastic mud. DEADLIEST AND as Mount Adams, would wait another Life downstream was forever 70 years to take the name of t he United changed. River commerce came to MOST DESTRUCTIVE States’ second president. a stop for a time. The incalculable VOLCANIC EVENTS IN Mountains have captured the imag- damage resulted in years of dredging, ination and awe of humankind since construction and countless human AMERICAN HISTORY. the dawn of time. Nearly every cul- and fi nancial costs before the Colum- ture has ascribed some spiritual sig- bia returned to its pristine state. Hav- nifi cance to the peaks in their realm. Often, a mountain ing spent many school days in Longview, Mount St. serves as the setting of a creation story, or some physi- Helens was always right over our shoulders, in winter cal manifestation of a spirit, god or goddess. For l ower dazzling white and in summer stripped and bare. Columbians, Mount St. Helens is a constant presence, whether you can see the mountain or not. On a clear day, See Mountain, Page B5 By RON BALDWIN For The Astorian A