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Kita-Bayonnaise

Caldera · Japan · 360m (submarine)

The submarine topography of the 6-7 km Myojin Knoll caldera is seen in this SeaBeam image viewed from the SW. The white line marks the E-W track of the survey vessel. A voluminous deposit of coarse pumice from the caldera-forming eruption mantles the caldera rim and its outer flanks. A post-caldera lava dome rises 250 m above the caldera floor.
The submarine topography of the 6-7 km Myojin Knoll caldera is seen in this SeaBeam image viewed from the SW. The white line marks the E-W track of the survey vessel. A voluminous deposit of coarse pumice from the caldera-forming eruption mantles the caldera rim and its outer flanks. A post-caldera lava dome rises 250 m above the caldera floor. · Photo: Image by Fumitoshi Murakami (Geological Survey of Japan, courtesy of Richard Fiske, Smithsonian Institution).
Type
Caldera
Country
Japan
Region
Northwestern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Izu Volcanic Arc
Elevation
360m (submarine)
Coordinates
32.100, 139.850
Last eruption
Unknown
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Landform
Caldera
Major rock type
Rhyolite
Geological summary

The large submarine Kita-Bayonnaise (North Bayonnaise) submarine caldera, also known as Myojin Knoll, lies between the Aogashima and Myojinsho (also called Beyonesu Rocks) calderas abotu 300 km SSE of the Izu Peninsula. The 6-7 km wide caldera has walls 500-900 m high that reveal rhyolitic lava flows, shallow intrusions, and volcaniclastic deposits. The high point on the western rim is a pumice-mantled remnant of the pre-collapse volcanic complex that reaches a depth of 360 m. A voluminous deposit of coarse rhyolitic pumice from the caldera-forming eruption covers the rim and outer flanks. Post-caldera eruptions formed a lava dome that rises 250 m above the caldera floor. The age of the caldera is not known, but was considered by Fiske et al. (2001) to perhaps be as young as a few thousand years. An active hydrothermal vent field lies on the eastern caldera floor and has produced a polymetallic sulfide deposit from vent chimneys up to 30 m high that emit fluids as hot as 278°C.

Eruption history

Detailed timeline

No eruption records available.

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.