Mount Emmons
Emmons Lake Volcanic Center
Caldera · United States · 1534m

- Type
- Caldera
- Country
- United States
- Region
- North America Volcanic Regions / Aleutian Ridge Volcanic Arc
- Elevation
- 1534m
- Coordinates
- 55.352, -162.044
- Last eruption
- Unknown
- Tectonic setting
- Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
- Landform
- Caldera
- Major rock type
- Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Geological summary
The Emmons Lake Volcanic Center, located north of Volcano Bay and SW of Pavlof volcano, includes the Emmons and Hague stratovolcanoes within the Emmons Lake caldera. The 9 x 15 km caldera contains a narrow elongated lake at its SW end that drains through a breach in the SE rim to the Pacific Ocean. The compound caldera was formed during six voluminous dacitic-to-rhyolitic eruptions between about 294,000 and 26,000 years ago that produced extensive ashflow tuffs. Mount Emmons, Mount Hague, and Double Crater are post-caldera cones of dominantly basaltic composition that were constructed along the SW-NE trend of the elongated caldera. Some Holocene flows have moved through a gap in the southern caldera rim to within 3 km of the ocean. A large fumarolic area is located on the south side of Mount Hague, and the only reported activity was the emission of steam plumes from Hague in 1990 and 1991.
From Wikipedia
Mount Emmons is a post-caldera stratovolcano within the Emmons Lake caldera on the Alaska Peninsula within the Lake and Peninsula Borough, Alaska, United States.
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Eruption history
Detailed timeline
No eruption records available.
External links
⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.