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Mount Iriga

Iriga

Stratovolcano · Philippines · 1138m

Mount Iriga has a horseshoe-shaped crater opening to the SE that resulted from a large flank collapse during a Holocene eruption. The hummocky terrain in the foreground encloses small ponds on the surface of the debris avalanche deposit.
Mount Iriga has a horseshoe-shaped crater opening to the SE that resulted from a large flank collapse during a Holocene eruption. The hummocky terrain in the foreground encloses small ponds on the surface of the debris avalanche deposit. · Photo: Photo by Chris Newhall (U.S. Geological Survey). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Stratovolcano
Country
Philippines
Region
Western Pacific Volcanic Regions / Eastern Philippine Volcanic Arc
Elevation
1138m
Coordinates
13.458, 123.451
Last eruption
Unknown
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Composite
Major rock type
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Geological summary

Mount Iriga (locally known as Mt Asog) is a small andesitic stratovolcano that rises immediately W of Lake Buhi which has satellitic cinder cones of basaltic composition. A large breached crater open to the SE was formed as a result of a major debris avalanche that buried several villages and formed a broad hummocky deposit across the plain south of Lake Buhi. This catastrophic event was at one time considered to have occurred during 1628 CE, but later work has shown that the collapse occurred earlier at some unknown date during the Holocene. An older debris avalanche deposit of similar size was also described SW of the volcano (Paguican et al., 2010). Both debris avalanche deposits cover wide areas of low, waterlogged plains, to a distance of ~16 km for the older and 12 km for the younger. The collapse orientation and deposit constituents for both are consistent with being a response to transtensional faulting and gravity spreading. A cone and lava covering about 9 km2 post-date the younger collapse.

From Wikipedia

Mount Iriga, also known as Mount Asog, is a dormant stratovolcano in the province of Camarines Sur, in the Philippines.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Detailed timeline

No eruption records available.

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.