ASH? WHAT ASH? *#/! ASH!

8 August 2011 by Liz O'Connell, posted in Cook Inlet Volcanoes


Photo: Image courtesy of the AVO/UAF-GI: SEM image of an ash particle erupted by Redoubt volcano on March 22, 2009. by Pavel Izbekov on March 23, 2009: The image was acquired by Pavel Izbekov and Jill Shipman using ISI-50 Scanning Electron Microscope at the Advanced Instrumentation Laboratory, University of Alaska Fairbanks.

By Liz O’Connell for FrontierScientists.com

Roughly translated and abbreviated; ASH? WHAT ASH? *#/! ASH!, was the conversation between the Anchorage control tower and the KLM pilot who had the misfortune of flying through a volcanic ash cloud on a December morning in 1989. It was dark, as it is most December mornings in Alaskan North.

This is how the transmission between the control tower and the KLM flight from Netherlands went:

  • Pilot - ‘’KLM 867 heavy is reaching level 250 heading 140’’
  • Anchorage Center- ‘’Okay, Do you have good sight on the ash plume at this time?’‘
  • Pilot — ’’Yea, it’s just cloudy it could be ashes. It’s just a little browner than the normal cloud.‘’
  • Pilot — ’’We have to go left now. . . it’s smoky in the cockpit at the moment, sir.‘’
  • Anchorage Center— ’’KLM 867 heavy, roger, left at your discretion.‘’
  • Pilot — ’’Climbing to level 390, we’re in a black cloud, heading 130.‘’
  • Pilot — ’’KLM 867 we have flame out all engines and we are descending now!‘’
  • Anchorage Center— ’’KLM 867 heavy, Anchorage?
  • Pilot — ‘’KLM 867 heavy, we are descending now. . . we are in a fall!’‘
  • Pilot — ’’KLM 867, we need all the assistance you have, sir. Give us radar vectors please!’’

 

Alaska Volcano Observatory was created in 1988. “But it wasn’t until that morning that we began operating as an observatory and we’ve been operating ever since” recounts Game McGimsey. Game tells the story in the vodcast “Redoubt’s Ash” on the website <a href=“http://www.FrontierScientists.com>FrontierScientists.com.
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Despite losing power to all four engines for eight minutes and dropping two miles from about 25,000 feet, the KLM flight landed safely at Anchorage International Airport. The 231 lives on the KLM survived the terrifying incident. The 747 KLM suffered $80 million damage and its engines had to be replaced.


Photo: Image courtesy of the National Weather Service by Jonathan Dehn: This is the extreme edge of the MTSAT view for the satellite which is over the equator in Asia.

Alaska contains 130 volcanoes. 90 of those volcanoes have been active in the past 10,000 years and might be expected to erupt again. Based on information provided by the Federal Aviation Administration, more than 80,000 large aircraft per year, and 30,000 people per day, are in the skies over and potentially downwind of Aleutian volcanoes on the heavily traveled great-circle routes between Europe, North America, and Asia. Volcanic eruptions from Cook Inlet volcanoes (Spurr, Redoubt, Iliamna, and Augustine) can have severe impacts, as these volcanoes are nearest to Anchorage, Alaska’s largest population center.


3 Responses to “ASH? WHAT ASH? *#/! ASH!”

  1. Laura Wheeler Reply | Permalink

    Tens of thousands of passengers across Britain and Europe were grounded in April 2010 after the plume of ash caused by the volcanic eruption in Iceland caused airports to close.  I was an unfortunate traveler stuck in Thailand at the time; I ended up getting on one of the first flights home and we flew at a low altitude – the sky looked brown and eerie, so i can only imagine what the KLM flight pilot went through! Thanks for sharing this fascinating story!

  2. Tine Janssens Reply | Permalink

    90 active  volcanoes? I’m glad I live in the Netherlands…

  3. Laura Wheeler Reply | Permalink

     I’m glad I live in London…..oh no wait may be I take that back after this week!! 

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