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Saint Paul Island

St. Paul Island

Shield volcano · United States · 203m

Crater Hill, on the western side of St. Paul Island, is one of many cones on the 110 km2 island. The complex crater is 200 m deep and has several smaller cones within it, as well as a 50-m-thick lava flow.
Crater Hill, on the western side of St. Paul Island, is one of many cones on the 110 km2 island. The complex crater is 200 m deep and has several smaller cones within it, as well as a 50-m-thick lava flow. · Photo: Photo by Art Sowls, 1988 (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Shield volcano
Country
United States
Region
North America Volcanic Regions / Northern Alaska-Bering Sea Volcanic Province
Elevation
203m
Coordinates
57.167, -170.213
Last eruption
-1280
Tectonic setting
Intraplate / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Shield
Major rock type
Trachybasalt / Tephrite Basanite
Geological summary

The largest of the Pribilof Islands, St. Paul contains numerous young cinder cones. It consists of a 110 km2 area of coalescing small basaltic-to-trachybasaltic shield volcanoes capped by cinder cones. The most widely exposed lava flows originated from vents in the Bogoslof Hill area in the center of the island and a row of cinder cones in the Rush Hill area on the west side. Subaerial activity began about 540,000 years ago and produced a basaltic lava platform. Later eruptions produced a series of monogenetic vents and two small shield volcanoes. Bogoslof Hill and Hutchinson Hill, forming isolated Northeast Point connected by a low narrow isthmus to the rest of the island, were formed during the Pleistocene. The youngest vent is the Fox Hill cinder cone on the western side of the island that produced a lava flow about 3,200 years ago that traveled into the sea at Southwest Point.

From Wikipedia

St. Paul is a city in the Aleutians West Census Area, Alaska, United States. It is the main settlement of Saint Paul Island in the Pribilof Islands, an archipelago in the Bering Sea. The population was 413 at the 2020 census, down from 479 in 2010.

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Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
1280 BCE~1090 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?1753~1943 · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?1280 BCE522 BCE2379951753

Detailed timeline

  1. 1943VEI ?Geological estimate
    1943 – Ongoing
    Several km SW of St. Paul
  2. 1280 BCE (±40 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 1280 – Ongoing
    West side (Fox Hill)

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.