<html>
<head>
<style><!--
.hmmessage P
{
margin:0px;
padding:0px
}
body.hmmessage
{
font-size: 10pt;
font-family:Tahoma
}
--></style></head>
<body class='hmmessage'><div dir='ltr'>
I have fairly complete records of Fan & Mortar from 2000 through 2011.<br><br>Here
are the numbers for the 2000-2005 active phase (ok, so this is probably
more detail than anyone really wanted, but since I had the numbers in
front of me, I thought I'd share):<br><br>First eruption: January 2000 (missing exact date), followed by several intervals of a month or more.<br>July 8-late October: intervals mostly 1-2 weeks<br>October 2000 to June 7, 2001: intervals 3 1/2-14 days<br>June 7, 2001 to April 8, 2003: intervals mostly 3-7 days; longest eruption of the "spring slowdown" in 2002 was only 9d21h38m<br>April 26-June 8: mini-dormancy of 42d19h25m (longest interval of active phase)<br>June 8-December 20: erratic intervals of mostly 4-11 days<br>Dec 20, 2003-January 24, 2004: mini-dormancy of 35d01h14m<br>February 2004: back to shorter intervals<br>March-June: long, erratic intervals of 9-27 days<br>July-August: short, regular intervals of 2 1/2-6 days EXCEPT for the shortest interval of the active phase, 1d15h56m<br>September-October: erratic intervals 2-9 days<br>November 2004-March 2005 : regular intervals 2 1/4-6 1/2 days<br>April-May: spring slowdown, longest interval 16d01h21m<br>June-August 8: regular intervals of 2-6 days<br>August 8: active phase comes to a screeching halt with no warning<br><br><br>And, here are the numbers for the 2007-2011 active phase:<br><br>June 5, 2007: first eruption, interval approximately 22 months<br>June
2007-April 2008: First interval 36 days, then intervals erratic, a few
periods of 3-5 day intervals but some much longer ones thrown in (up to
24d<br>April 2008-June 2008: Mini-dormancy of at least 57 days (longest interval of active phase)<br>July 2008-November 2008: intervals mostly 2 1/2-5 1/2 days with a little slowdown in October<br>November 2008-April 2009: not much known, hard to know from occasional washed marker reports<br>April 25-May 31: mini-dormancy of at least 35 days<br>June 2009-December 2010: intervals mostly 3-6 days (longest interval of 2010 spring slowdown: 12d3h34m)<br>January-April 2011: intervals 5-8 days<br>May 3-June ~18: mini-dormancy of ~45-46 days<br>July-October 15: intervals 2 1/2-6 days<br>October
14-15 overnight: last eruption of active phase; hard to tell if there
was any warning due to most eruptions occurring at night<br><br><br>So,
that's more than you ever wanted to know about F&M. The 2007-2011
active phase was a little more erratic than 2000-2005 with several
mini-dormancies. But both active phases had extended periods of very
regular intervals, and *most* eruptions were preceded by "event
cycles." The nature of these evolved over time but thanks to radios,
Fan & Mortar were certainly more seeable in the 2000s than ever
before.<br><br>--Tara Cross<br>fanandmortar@hotmail.com<br><br><div><div id="SkyDrivePlaceholder"></div>> Date: Sat, 17 Dec 2011 23:18:39 -0500<br>> From: goldbeml@ucmail.uc.edu<br>> To: geysers@lists.wallawalla.edu<br>> Subject: [Geysers] Fan and Mortar history<br>> <br>> Between the season-ending reports that Fan and Mortar looked "broken" and <br>> the lack of washed markers to start the winter, I have a sinking feeling <br>> that they've gone dormant for the time being.<br>> <br>> I've cobbled together an incomplete history of F&M active phases over the <br>> past 25 years. Some of it is personal recollection. Where possible I <br>> have corroborated (or corrected) it using the OFVC logbook data posted <br>> on GOSA's website.<br>> <br>> Dormant 1985-86?<br>> Active 1987-88<br>> Dormant or very infrequent 1989 (early issues of the Sput would know)<br>> Active 1990-94<br>> Dormant 1995-June 1996<br>> Active June 1996-May 1998<br>> Dormant May 1998-July 2000<br>> Active July 2000-August 2005<br>> Dormant August 2005-June 2007<br>> Active June 2007-October 2011<br>> <br>> In many of the active years, there is a seasonal period of longer <br>> intervals (sometimes over a month) during the spring high water.<br>> The onset of actual dormancy appears to come at any time, often without <br>> warning (2005 is a good example).<br>> <br>> On the flip side, once eruptions resume the intervals might drop right <br>> away to their normal range. Let's hope that happens again soon.<br>> <br>> Michael Goldberg<br>> michael.goldberg@uc.edu<br>> _______________________________________________<br>> Geysers mailing list<br>> Geysers@lists.wallawalla.edu<br>> https://lists.wallawalla.edu/mailman/listinfo/geysers<br></div>                                            </div></body>
</html>