Montserrat Volcanic Eruption Case Study (1995–1997)
BACKGROUND & CAUSES
Location: Montserrat is a small British Overseas Territory in the Caribbean, part of the Lesser
Antilles. Prior to 1995, the Soufrière Hills volcano had been dormant for over 300 years.
Tectonic Setting: The island lies on a destructive plate margin where the North American
oceanic plate subducts beneath the Caribbean plate. Melting crust in the Benioff zone produced
magma that rose to the surface.
Nature of the Eruption: The magma was highly viscous (andesitic), causing it to build up into a
steep lava dome rather than flowing away. As the dome grew unstable and collapsed, it
produced explosive eruptions and devastating, fast-moving clouds of hot rock, ash, and gas
known as pyroclastic flows.
PRIMARY IMPACTS
• Loss of Life: On 25 June 1997, a major pyroclastic flow killed 19 people who had returned
to the exclusion zone to tend their farms.
• Destruction of the Capital: The capital city, Plymouth, was completely buried under several
metres of ash and mud, eventually being abandoned like a "modern-day Pompeii."
• Infrastructure Collapse: The island's only hospital, airport, and many schools were
destroyed by pyroclastic flows and lahars (volcanic mudflows).
• Environmental Devastation: Two-thirds of the island was covered in thick ash, which
incinerated vegetation (temperatures exceeded 400°C) and turned day into night.
SECONDARY IMPACTS
• Mass Migration: Over half of the island's population (dropping from roughly 11,000 to 4,000)
was forced to leave, relocating mainly to the UK and neighbouring Caribbean islands.
• Economic Crash: The ash buried farmlands, destroying crops and livestock, which
devastated the agricultural industry. The tourism industry collapsed almost entirely.
• Health Issues: Airborne volcanic ash caused a sharp increase in respiratory illnesses, such
as asthma and exercise-induced bronchoconstriction, especially among children.