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Marrah Mountains

Marra, Jebel

Volcanic field · Sudan · 3042m

A lake partially fills a younger cone within the Deriba caldera of Jebel Marra volcano in this view from the N. The 5-km-wide, steep-walled caldera, whose wall appears in the background, was formed about 3,500 years ago at the time of the eruption of voluminous airfall pumice and pyroclastic flows that traveled more than 30 km from the volcano. Post-caldera ash eruptions may have continued into historical time.
A lake partially fills a younger cone within the Deriba caldera of Jebel Marra volcano in this view from the N. The 5-km-wide, steep-walled caldera, whose wall appears in the background, was formed about 3,500 years ago at the time of the eruption of voluminous airfall pumice and pyroclastic flows that traveled more than 30 km from the volcano. Post-caldera ash eruptions may have continued into historical time. · Photo: Photo by J. Williams, 1986 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Sudan_Jebel_Marra_Deriba_Lakes.jpg) · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Volcanic field
Country
Sudan
Region
Northern Africa Volcanic Regions / Southeast Sahara Volcanic Province
Elevation
3042m
Coordinates
12.950, 24.270
Last eruption
-2000
Tectonic setting
Intraplate / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Cluster
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

The most prominent feature of the vast Jebel Marra volcanic field, located in the Darfur province of western Sudan, is the youthful Deriba caldera. The 5-km-wide, steep-walled caldera, located at the southern end of the field, was formed about 3,500 years ago at the time of the eruption of voluminous airfall pumice and pyroclastic flows that traveled more than 30 km from the volcano. The Jebel Marra volcanic field covers a broad area of the Marra Mountains and contains early basaltic lava flows overlain by thick sequences of pyroclastic-flow deposits. The northern part of the field displays trachytic lava plugs and spines forming residual inselbergs and young basaltic scoria cones and lava flows. Ash eruptions at Deriba caldera may have continued into early historical time (Burton and Wickers, 1966), and fumarolic activity has been observed on the flanks of a small pyroclastic cone within the caldera.

From Wikipedia

The Marrah Mountains or Marra Mountains are a range of volcanic peaks in a massif that rises up to 3,012 metres (9,882 ft). They are the highest mountains in Sudan.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
2000 BCE~2000 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI 42000 BCE2000 BCE1999 BCE1999 BCE1999 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 2000 BCEVEI 4Geological estimate
    BCE 2000 – Ongoing
    Deriba caldera

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.