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Chyulu Hills

Volcanic field · Kenya · 2188m

The Chyulu Hills volcanic field in southern Kenya covers an area of over 2,800 km2 and is located around 150 km E of the southern Kenya Rift Valley. More recent activity has occurred in the southern part of the field, containing a 50-km-long main central ridge with numerous cones and craters seen here in this 3 February 2019 Sentinel-2 satellite image (N at the top).
The Chyulu Hills volcanic field in southern Kenya covers an area of over 2,800 km2 and is located around 150 km E of the southern Kenya Rift Valley. More recent activity has occurred in the southern part of the field, containing a 50-km-long main central ridge with numerous cones and craters seen here in this 3 February 2019 Sentinel-2 satellite image (N at the top). · Photo: Satellite image courtesy of Copernicus Sentinel Data, 2019. · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Volcanic field
Country
Kenya
Region
Eastern Africa Volcanic Regions / Kenyan Rift Volcanic Province
Elevation
2188m
Coordinates
-2.680, 37.880
Last eruption
1855
Tectonic setting
Rift zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Cluster
Major rock type
Trachybasalt / Tephrite Basanite
Geological summary

The 100-km-long NW-SE-trending Chyulu Hills volcanic field is located 150 km E of the Kenya Rift. It contains several hundred small cones and flows, including numerous recent cinder cones. Two of these, Shaitani and Chainu, erupted during the mid-19th century. Volcanic activity began about 1.4 million years ago with eruptions in the northern Chyulu Hills and migrated to the SE, where a large number of Holocene cones are found. Many of the cinder cones are aligned along dominantly NW-trending older faults and younger NNE-trending fissures. The silica contents of the lava flows increased with time. Early flows consisted of foidites; later Holocene lava flows are basanites and alkali basalts. Six tephra deposits from Lake Chala were attibuted by Martin-Jones et al. (2020) to Pleistocene eruptions in the Chyulu Hills (~87-16.8 ka), along with one Holocene mafic cryptotephra 14C dated at about 4.2 ka.

From Wikipedia

The Chyulu Hills is a mountain range in Makueni County in southeastern Kenya. It forms a 100 km (62 mi)-long volcanic field in an elongated northwest–southeast direction. Its highest peak is 2,188 m (7,178 ft) high.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
2250 BCE~2055 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?1464~1660 · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?1660~1855 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 22250 BCE1273 BCE295 BCE6821660

Detailed timeline

  1. 1855 (±5 yrs)VEI 2Geological estimate
    1855 – Ongoing
    Shaitani and Chaimu
  2. 1470 (±200 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    1470 – Ongoing
    Umani
  3. 2250 BCE (±110 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 2250 – Ongoing

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.