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Harrat al-Sham

Ash Shaam, Harrat

Volcanic field · Syria-Jordan-Saudi Arabia · 1100m

Snow-capped Tell Qeni is the highest point of the Jabal ad Druze volcanic field, the southernmost in Syria. It lies in the Haurun-Druze Plateau in SW Syria near the border with Jordan. The field consists of a group of 118 basaltic volcanoes active from the early Pleistocene to the Holocene.
Snow-capped Tell Qeni is the highest point of the Jabal ad Druze volcanic field, the southernmost in Syria. It lies in the Haurun-Druze Plateau in SW Syria near the border with Jordan. The field consists of a group of 118 basaltic volcanoes active from the early Pleistocene to the Holocene. · Photo: Anonymous photo by Wikipedia user KFZI310, 2006. · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Volcanic field
Country
Syria-Jordan-Saudi Arabia
Region
Arabia-Central Asia Volcanic Regions / Northern Arabia Volcanic Province
Elevation
1100m
Coordinates
32.333, 37.583
Last eruption
-2670
Tectonic setting
Intraplate / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Cluster
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

The massive Harrat Ash Shaam volcanic province, which extends from Syria through Jordan and into northern Saudi Arabia, contains many smaller volcanic fields. Activity began during the Miocene; a younger eruptive stage, at the SE end of the field, occurred during the late Pleistocene and Holocene (Brown et al., 1984). Al Harrah, a large basaltic volcanic field in northwestern Saudi Arabia, covers an area of 15,200 km2 and forms the southern third of the harrat across a 210-km-long, roughly 75-km-wide area. Other fields include the Jabal ad Druze, Es Safa, Golan Heights, and the Kra Lava Field where radiocarbon dating indicated an eruption at 2,670 BCE ± 200 years. Although a "boiling lava lake" eruption has been in the volcanological literature since 1925, a translation of the original source of that report by Wetzstein (1860) clearly shows that he was describing solidified crater floor surface features and lava flows.

From Wikipedia

The Ḥarrat al-Shām, also known as the Harrat al-Harra or Harrat al-Shaba, and sometimes the Black Desert in English, is a region of rocky, basaltic desert straddling southern Syrian region and the northern Arabian Peninsula. It covers an area of some 40,000 km2 (15,000 sq mi) in the modern-day Syrian Arab Republic, Israel, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. Vegetation is characteristically open acacia shrubland with patches of juniper at higher altitudes.

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Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
2670 BCE~2670 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?2670 BCE2670 BCE2669 BCE2669 BCE2669 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 2670 BCE (±200 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 2670 – Ongoing
    Kra lava field

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.