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Numazawa

Shield volcano · Japan · 835m

Numazawa caldera lake is viewed from its NE shore with a 40,000-year-old lava dome forming the right horizon. The 1.5 x 2 km caldera was formed about 5,000 years ago during the eruption of the Numazawako Pumice Flow and Plinian fall deposit. The small Numazawa caldera was constructed within an older Pliocene caldera.
Numazawa caldera lake is viewed from its NE shore with a 40,000-year-old lava dome forming the right horizon. The 1.5 x 2 km caldera was formed about 5,000 years ago during the eruption of the Numazawako Pumice Flow and Plinian fall deposit. The small Numazawa caldera was constructed within an older Pliocene caldera. · Photo: Copyrighted photo by Tadahide Ui (Japanese Quaternary Volcanoes database, RIODB, http://riodb02.ibase.aist.go.jp/strata/VOL_JP/EN/index.htm and Geol Surv Japan, AIST, http://www.gsj.jp/). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Shield volcano
Country
Japan
Region
Northwestern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Northeast Japan Volcanic Arc
Elevation
835m
Coordinates
37.444, 139.566
Last eruption
-3400
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Shield
Major rock type
Dacite
Geological summary

Numazawa is a small, 2-km-wide dominantly dacitic-to-rhyolitic caldera constructed within an older Pliocene caldera. Eruptions of the 110,00 years before present (BP) rhyolitic Shibahara pyroclastic-fall deposit and the 71,000 BP dacitic Mukuresawa lava dome were followed by the dacitic plinian Mizunuma eruption about 45,000 BP, emplacement of the Sozan lava dome at 43,000 BP and the Sozan lava dome at about 20,000 BP. The Numazawako pumice flow and plinian eruption about 4600 years BP resulted in formation of the 1.5 x 2 km Numazawako caldera, now largely filled by a caldera lake.

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
3400 BCE~3400 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI 53400 BCE3400 BCE3399 BCE3399 BCE3399 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 3400 BCEVEI 5Geological estimate
    BCE 3400 – Ongoing

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.