Mount Suswa
Suswa
Shield volcano · Kenya · 2356m

- Type
- Shield volcano
- Country
- Kenya
- Region
- Eastern Africa Volcanic Regions / Kenyan Rift Volcanic Province
- Elevation
- 2356m
- Coordinates
- -1.151, 36.357
- Last eruption
- Unknown
- Tectonic setting
- Rift zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
- Landform
- Shield
- Major rock type
- Phonolite
Geological summary
The phonolitic-to-trachytic Suswa volcano in the Kenyan Rift, ~50 km WNW of Nairobi, is notable for its 8 x 12 km caldera. Construction of an early shield volcano was followed by eruption of voluminous Pleistocene pumice and lava flows that accompanied incremental formation of the caldera. The post-caldera lava cone of Ol Doinyo Onyoke ("The Red Mountain," also known as Ol Doinyo Nyukie) is on the south side of the caldera. A large elongated summit crater is truncated on the north by a ring graben. This unusual 5-km-wide circular graben at the center of the older caldera isolates a tilted island block of caldera-floor lava flows. Some lava flows from flank vents remain unvegetated and may be only a century or so old, but have not been dated.
From Wikipedia
Mount Suswa is a shield volcano in the Great Rift Valley, Kenya. It is located between Narok and Nairobi, the capital of Kenya. The northwestern part of Mount Suswa is in Narok County, while the eastern and southern parts are in Kajiado County. The town with the same name, Suswa, is just northwest of the mountain and it is the main access point for visits to the mountain.
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Eruption history
Detailed timeline
No eruption records available.
External links
⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.