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Volcano in Alaska in the midst of extreme cold and activity in Hawaii
Published: 12/30/2011 11:42 AM
Last Modified: 12/30/2011 11:43 AM


Is this in Alaska's future? A view of the Tungurahua volcano as it erupts as seen from Cotalo, Ecuador on Nov. 30. DOLORES OCHOA/AP Photo

"I made a joke that at this point, we (Oklahoma) can expect a volcano."

After asking an Oklahoma climatologist earlier this month (see the story here) on what we should expect after everything we had in 2011, that was his first response on what Oklahoma should expect in 2012.

As he said, it was a joke, but elsewhere in the United States, volcanoes are as much a part of people's lives as tornadoes are here.

While Anchorage, Alaska, is camping around 11-degree highs and minus-1 degree lows, 940 miles southwest (Alaska is a bigger state than Texas, keep in mind), cold temperatures are the least of Alaskan's worries.

According to the Associated Press, a volcano in Alaska's Aleutian Islands sent up an ash cloud Thursday that prompted scientists to increase the alert level for commercial aircraft traffic.

The Alaska Volcano Observatory said satellite images at 4:02 a.m. Alaska time showed Cleveland Volcano had spewed ash 15,000 feet into the air in a cloud that moved east-southeast. U.S. Geological Survey scientist-in-charge John Power called it a small explosion.

"It's not expected to cause a disruption to big international air carriers," he said.

However, it was significant enough to raise the alert level from yellow, representing elevated unrest, to orange, representing an increased potential of eruption, or an eruption under way with minor ash emissions or no emissions.

"Potential of eruption?" You mean lava, which in liquid state is 1,300 to 2,200 degrees, is going to be in the same state where other areas are experiencing below-zero lows this time of year?!

Just another way that 2011 is a crazy year for the atmosphere and not just Oklahoma, I guess.

Elsewhere in the non-continental United States, Hawaii is also experiencing its own volcanic event. From the Associated Press:

More than 400 people watched from a Big Island viewing point to marvel at lava flowing into the ocean.

Hawaii County Civil Defense Acting Administrator John Drummond said the lava at Kilauea isn't threatening homes or structures, but steam is blasting from the point where it reaches the sea along the coast within the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.

On Wednesday, the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory released new photos of the lava, which is attracting spectators.

The Kilauea volcano has been continuously erupting since 1983.

Lava from the volcano's Puu Oo vent reached the ocean earlier this month.

The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reports it is the first time since 2007 that lava is entering the ocean within the park. Park visitors can hike about four miles to the site.

No Alaska images yet, but here's some recent volcano images from the AP wire from around the world:


A plume of smoke comes out the Tungurahua volcano after it erupted as seen from Cotalo, Ecuador on Nov. 30. DOLORES OCHOA/AP Photo


A cow wears a cloth to cover its nose and mouth as a protection due to the smoke and ashes erupted from the Tungurahua volcano in Cotalo, Ecuador on Nov. 30. DOLORES OCHOA/AP Photo


An Image Provided by NASA from the Advanced Land Imager (ALI) on NASA’s Earth Observing-1 (EO-1) satellite made Dec. 23 is a natural-color image of the active fissure northwest of the Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcano caldera in Chile as a plume blows from the fissure toward the west and north. This image shows not just ash but also snow on the volcano surface, including the caldera. AP Photo/NASA


An image provided by NASA made Dec. 23 shows an eruption in the Red Sea that appears to have created a new island. AP Photo/NASA


In this Dec. 27 photo provided by the U.S. Geological Survey, lava flows in to the ocean at West Ka‘ili‘ili in in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. AP Photo/U.S. Geological Survey

--Althea Peterson



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Almanac
View 2012
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
TemperaturePrecipitation
DateHigh TempLow TempTotalMonth to dateHistorical average
1 44° 16° 0 0.00 0.05
2 59° 24° 0 0.00 0.11
3 57° 33° 0 0.00 0.16
4 68° 37° Trace 0.00 0.21
5 69° 29° 0 0.00 0.26
6 66° 33° 0 0.00 0.32
7 59° 38° 0.05 0.05 0.38
8 51° 34° 0 0.05 0.44
9 44° 36° 0.01 0.06 0.51
10 62° 37° 0.07 0.13 0.57
11 54° 28° 0 0.13 0.64
12 44° 30° 0.25 0.38 0.70
13 55° 40° 0.01 0.39 0.76
14 ° ° 0.83
15 ° ° 0.89
16 ° ° 0.95
17 ° ° 1.02
18 ° ° 1.09
19 ° ° 1.16
20 ° ° 1.23
21 ° ° 1.31
22 ° ° 1.38
23 ° ° 1.46
24 ° ° 1.53
25 ° ° 1.61
26 ° ° 1.69
27 ° ° 1.77
28 ° ° 1.85

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Tulsa weather milestones of 2013 (as of Feb. 12)

Highest temperature: 70 on Jan. 11 (Record: 115 on Aug. 15, 1936)
Lowest temperature: 15 on Jan. 16 (Record: Minus-16 on Jan. 22, 1930)
Hottest month (average): 40.5 degrees in January (Record: 91.7 degrees on July 1980)
Coldest month (average): 40. 5 degrees in January (Record: 21.7 in January 1918)
Most snowfall (day): 0.1 of an inch on Feb. 12(Record: 13.2 inches on Feb. 1, 2011)
Most snowfall (month): 0.1 of an inch in February(Record: 22.5 inches in February 2011)
Most rainfall (day): 0.91 of an inch on Jan. 29 (Record: 9.27 inches on May 26-27, 1984)
Most rainfall (month): 1.54 of an inch in January (Record: 18.18 inches on September 1971)
Highest wind speed: 30 mph on Jan. 30
Previous day with any rain: Feb. 12
Previous day with 1 inch or more of rain: Oct. 17, 2012
Previous day with any snow: Feb. 12
Previous day with freezing temperatures: Feb. 12
Read regular updates on Oklahoma's unpredictable weather and learn more about meteorology from the Tulsa office of the National Weather Service.

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Contributors
Staff Writer Althea Peterson started writing for the Tulsa World in March 2007 after previous stops at the Norman Transcript in 2006 and the Oklahoma Gazette in 2005. She followed her older brother from rural Wisconsin (with a public school that never seemed to call snow days) to the University of Oklahoma, but did not follow his pursuit to study meteorology. However, she tries to find as many opportunities to report on the weather as possible.

Staff Writer Jerry Wofford came to the Tulsa World in 2010 from The Manhattan Mercury in Manhattan, Kan. Originally from western Arkansas and a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Jerry has lived in Tornado Alley his entire life and is one of those people who goes outside when the sirens go off.

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