Skip to main content

Mayor Island / Tūhua

Tuhua/Mayor Island

Shield volcano · New Zealand · 355m

Mayor Island in the Bay of Plenty is seen here from the W. The low, 4-km-wide island, also known as Tuhua, is the summit of the broad 15-km-wide volcano. A 3-km-wide caldera formed during two or three collapse events, the latest of which followed a major explosive eruption about 6,300 years ago. Mayor Island was recognized as an active volcano only within the past two decades. Its latest eruption may have occurred only 500-1,000 years ago.
Mayor Island in the Bay of Plenty is seen here from the W. The low, 4-km-wide island, also known as Tuhua, is the summit of the broad 15-km-wide volcano. A 3-km-wide caldera formed during two or three collapse events, the latest of which followed a major explosive eruption about 6,300 years ago. Mayor Island was recognized as an active volcano only within the past two decades. Its latest eruption may have occurred only 500-1,000 years ago. · Photo: Photo by Malcolm Buck, 1980. · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Shield volcano
Country
New Zealand
Region
Tonga-Kermadec Volcanic Regions / Taupo Volcanic Arc
Elevation
355m
Coordinates
-37.280, 176.250
Last eruption
-5055
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Shield
Major rock type
Rhyolite
Geological summary

The 4-km-wide Tuhua/Mayor Island, offshore of North Island in the Bay of Plenty, is the emergent portion of a 15-km-wide peralkaline shield volcano constructed between about 120,000 and 35,000 years ago. A 3-km-wide composite caldera was formed in two or three collapse events, the last of which took place about 6,300 years ago, and was accompanied by a Plinian eruption that produced tephra deposits up to 70 cm thick on the mainland. Post-caldera eruptions generated a series of lava domes and flows emplaced from NNE-trending vents within the caldera that have filled it to depths of at least 180 m. The latest eruption has not been dated, but was considered by Houghton et al. (1992) to have occurred perhaps only 500-1,000 years ago.

From Wikipedia

Mayor Island / Tūhua is a dormant shield volcano located 26 km (16 mi) off the Bay of Plenty coast of New Zealand's North Island. It covers 13 km2 (5 sq mi).

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
6050 BCE~5950 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?5154 BCE~5055 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI 56050 BCE5851 BCE5552 BCE5353 BCE5154 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 5055 BCE (±155 yrs)VEI 5Geological estimate
    BCE 5055 – Ongoing
    South end of caldera, Taratimi Bay
  2. 6050 BCE (±75 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 6050 – Ongoing
    SE caldera rim

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.