Zavaritski Caldera
Zavaritzki Caldera
Caldera · Russia · 612m

- Type
- Caldera
- Country
- Russia
- Region
- Northwestern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Kuril Volcanic Arc
- Elevation
- 612m
- Coordinates
- 46.918, 151.952
- Last eruption
- 1957
- Tectonic setting
- Subduction zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
- Landform
- Caldera
- Major rock type
- Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Geological summary
The Zavaritzki volcano on Simushir Island in the central Kuril Islands contains three nested calderas 10, 8, and 3 km in diameter. The steep-walled youngest caldera was formed during the Holocene and includes several young cones and lava domes near the margins of Biryuzovoe Lake. The current lake surface is at ~40 m elevation with the bottom ~30 m below sea level, but lacustrine sediments overlying pumice deposits indicate that the surface of an earlier caldera lake lay at 200 m above sea level. A small 500-m-diameter scoria cone, sketched by Gorshkov (1958, CAVW) that reportedly grew between 1916 and 1931, formed a peninsula extending into the lake from the NE caldera wall. Explosive eruptions in 1957 removed the cone and filled much of the NW part of the lake, including emplacement of a 350-m-wide, 40-m-high dome. Hutchison et al. (2024) provided convincing evidence that Zavaritski Caldera was the source for a significant sulfur-rich eruption in 1831 CE, which was previously known only from ice core data and thought to have possibly originated from Babuyan Claro volcano.
From Wikipedia
Zavaritski Caldera, also spelled "Zavaritskii" and "Zavaritsky", is a caldera system located in the centre of Simushir island, in the central Kuril Islands, Russia. The volcano is named after Alexander Nikolayevich Zavaritski, a scientist of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union.
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Eruption history
Detailed timeline
- 1957VEI 3Observed1957-11-12 – 1957-12-01N end of inner caldera
- 1923 (±8 yrs)VEI 1Observed1923 – OngoingN end of inner caldera
External links
⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.