Skip to main content

Northwest Rota

NW Rota-1

Stratovolcano · United States · 455m (submarine)

An eruption plume rises from a submarine vent on NW-Rota 1 volcano on 27 April 2006. This volcano was first detected during a 2003 NOAA bathymetric survey of the Mariana Island arc. The seamount rises to within about 500 m of the sea surface SW of Esmeralda Bank. During subsequent visits in 2005, 2006, and 2008, the volcano was seen to be in eruption.
An eruption plume rises from a submarine vent on NW-Rota 1 volcano on 27 April 2006. This volcano was first detected during a 2003 NOAA bathymetric survey of the Mariana Island arc. The seamount rises to within about 500 m of the sea surface SW of Esmeralda Bank. During subsequent visits in 2005, 2006, and 2008, the volcano was seen to be in eruption. · Photo: Courtesy of Bill Chadwick, 2006 (Oregon State University/NOAA). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Stratovolcano
Country
United States
Region
Northwestern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Mariana Volcanic Arc
Elevation
455m (submarine)
Coordinates
14.601, 144.775
Last eruption
2010
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Crustal thickness unknown
Landform
Composite
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

A submarine volcano detected during a 2003 NOAA bathymetric survey of the Mariana Island arc was found to be hydrothermally active and named NW Rota-1. The basaltic to basaltic andesite seamount rises to within 517 m of the ocean surface SW of Esmeralda Bank, 64 km NW of Rota Island and ~100 km N of Guam. When Northwest Rota-1 was revisited in 2004, a minor submarine eruption from a vent named Brimstone Pit on the upper south flank about 40 m below the summit intermittently ejected a plume several hundred meters high containing ash, rock particles, and molten sulfur droplets that adhered to the surface of the remotely operated submersible vehicle. The active vent was funnel-shaped, about 20 m wide and 12 m deep. Prominent structural lineaments about a kilometer apart cut across the summit of the edifice and down the NE and SW flanks.

From Wikipedia

NW Rota-1 is a seamount in the Mariana Islands, northwest of Rota, which was discovered through its hydrothermal activity in 2003. The volcano has been observed to be erupting underwater, the first time that submarine explosive eruptions have been directly witnessed.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
2003~2003 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 020032003200420042004

Detailed timeline

  1. 2003VEI 0Observed
    2003-07-02 – 2010-03-16
    Upper South flank (Brimstone Pit)

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.