Geologic Publications for Mount Rainier
Influence of modeling assumptions on pedestrian evacuation success for non-eruptive lahar hazards at Mount Rainier, Washington
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Author(s):
Nathan J. Wood,
Jeff Peters
Category: PUBLICATION
Document Type:
Publisher: International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction
Published Year: 2026
Volume: 139
Number:
Pages: 16
DOI Identifier: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2026.106132
ISBN Identifier:
Keywords: Volcano Lahar Evacuation Hazard Exposure Modeling
Abstract:
Previous efforts to characterize lahar threats posed to communities downstream of volcanoes have focused primarily on delineating hazard zones that lack information on lahar-arrival times and exposure estimates that implicitly treat threats to be the same regardless of distance from the volcano. Estimated lahar-arrival times, travel times for individuals to leave hazard zones, and possible evacuation delays related to event identification, warning dissemination, and evacuee behavior are important, but often overlooked, aspects of understanding the societal threats posed by lahars. These temporal considerations are important for unexpected lahars that could occur due to slope failure in the absence of precursory volcanic unrest or eruption. This case study examines the role of time in lahar evacuations by quantifying population exposure and evacuation potential for non-eruptive lahar hazards associated with Mount Rainier, Washington. Lahars could directly affect tens of thousands of residents and employees, thousands of students at primary and secondary schools, and hundreds of individuals at long-term residential care facilities. Geospatial path-distance modeling quantified evacuation potential for 736 scenarios that represent combinations of lahar sources, evacuation destinations, pedestrian travel speeds, and a range of departure-delay assumptions. Depending on location, some communities may have substantial loss of life in tens of minutes after lahar initiation, whereas other communities may be managing large-scale evacuations over several hours. Estimates of evacuation success based on a range of scenarios provide individuals in hazard zones and risk-reduction agencies with insights on how their actions may increase or decrease the number of people that survive future lahars.
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Suggested Citations:
In Text Citation:
Wood and Peters (2026) or (Wood and Peters, 2026)
References Citation:
Wood, N.J. and J. Peters, 2026, Influence of modeling assumptions on pedestrian evacuation success for non-eruptive lahar hazards at Mount Rainier, Washington: International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, Vol. 139, 16 p., doi:
10.1016/j.ijdrr.2026.106132.