United States (California) [Legacy Version: 1991–1997]

Note: This VAL system was in use from 1991June 1997. The current VAL system can be found here.

Agency: United States Geological Survey (USGS)

Name: Status Ranking and Activity Levels


Reproduced from: Hill, D. P., Johnston, M. J., Langbein, J. O., McNutt, S. R., Miller, C. D., Mortensen, C. E., & Pitt, A. M. (1991). Response plans for volcanic hazards in the Long Valley caldera and Mono Craters area, California. U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 91-270 https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr91270

Elements of VAL system

DomainTerrestrial
VolcanoCalifornia
Scheme range6-level scale
Lowest level1
Highest level6
Level name typeWord
Level for lack/loss of monitoringNo
Volcanic activityYes
Hazards possible No
Locations affectedNo
Potential impactsNo
Forecast languageYes
Timing languageYes
Actions to takeNo
Agency actionsYes
Link to evacuationsNo
Reporting frequency per levelNo
Link to monitoring thresholdsYes
Step-up and step-down languageNo

Related References

Fearnley, C. J., McGuire, W. J., Davies, G., & Twigg, J. (2012). Standardisation of the USGS Volcano Alert Level System (VALS): analysis and ramifications. Bulletin of Volcanology, 74(9), 2023-2036. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00445-012-0645-6

Hill, D. P., Johnston, M. J., Langbein, J. O., McNutt, S. R., Miller, C. D., Mortensen, C. E., & Pitt, A. M. (1991). Response plans for volcanic hazards in the Long Valley caldera and Mono Craters area, California Open-File Report No. 91-270. US Dept. of the Interior, US Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr91270

Hill, D. P., Mangan, M. T., & McNutt, S. R. (2017). Volcanic unrest and hazard communication in Long Valley volcanic region, California.In: Fearnley, C.J., Bird, D.K., Haynes, K., McGuire, W.J., Jolly, G. (eds) Observing the Volcano World. Advances in Volcanology. Springer, Cham. (pp. 171-187). https://doi.org/10.1007/11157_2016_32