Waiowa
Sessagara Hills
Volcanic field · Papua New Guinea · 493m

- Type
- Volcanic field
- Country
- Papua New Guinea
- Region
- Southwestern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Trobriand Volcanic Province
- Elevation
- 493m
- Coordinates
- -9.554, 149.128
- Last eruption
- 1944
- Tectonic setting
- Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
- Landform
- Cluster
- Major rock type
- Trachyandesite / Basaltic Trachyandesite
Geological summary
The small low-lying andesitic Sessagara Hills volcanic field is located near the mouth of the Uiaka River, south of Collingwood Bay and NE of the Goropu Mountains on the Papuan Peninsula of New Guinea. There are at least two small forest-covered cones, with a small cone and obvious crater ~5 km NE of them and the Waiowa cone ~6 km W. Besides Waiowa (also known as Goropu), Smith (1981) considered some other features in the field to be Holocene; other cones may be of Pleistocene age. The Waiowa pyroclastic cone was formed during 1943-44 by explosive eruptions through Paleozoic to Precambrian metamorphic rocks. Intermittent minor explosions beginning on 18 September 1943 preceded the first major explosion on 27 December. Additional large explosions occurred on 13 February and 23 July 1944, leveling 80 km2 of forest. Following the final activity on 31 August, the small cone included a 500-m-wide, steep-walled crater that later became densely forested and contains a small lake.
From Wikipedia
Waiowa is an isolated trachyandesitic volcano on New Guinea island, Papua New Guinea. It is located 19 km inland from Collingwood Bay in Oro Province. It lies on a fault line along the northeast flank of the Owen Stanley metamorphic belt. It is one of the planet's newest volcanoes, it formed in September 1943.
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Eruption history
Detailed timeline
- 1943VEI 3Observed1943-09-18 – 1944-08-31
External links
⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.