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Crater Lake

Caldera · United States · 2487m

The 8 x 10 km wide Crater Lake caldera formed about 7,700 years ago during one of the world's largest Holocene eruptions. This eruption resulted in the collapse of ancestral Mount Mazama. This view from the east shows Mount Scott in the right foreground, one of the pre-caldera volcanoes. A post-caldera cone, Wizard Island, rises above the far lake surface.
The 8 x 10 km wide Crater Lake caldera formed about 7,700 years ago during one of the world's largest Holocene eruptions. This eruption resulted in the collapse of ancestral Mount Mazama. This view from the east shows Mount Scott in the right foreground, one of the pre-caldera volcanoes. A post-caldera cone, Wizard Island, rises above the far lake surface. · Photo: Photo by Peter Lipman, 1981 (U.S. Geological Survey). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Caldera
Country
United States
Region
North America Volcanic Regions / High Cascades Volcanic Arc
Elevation
2487m
Coordinates
42.942, -122.107
Last eruption
-2850
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Caldera
Major rock type
Dacite
Geological summary

The spectacular 8 x 10 km Crater Lake caldera in the southern Cascades of Oregon formed about 7,700 years ago as a result of the collapse of a complex of overlapping shield and stratovolcanoes known as Mount Mazama. The cone-building stage, during which at least five andesitic and dacitic shields and stratovolcanoes were constructed, took place between about 420 and 40 thousand years ago (ka). A series of rhyodacitic lava domes and flows and associated pyroclastic rocks were erupted between about 30 ka and the climactic eruption. The explosive eruptions triggering collapse of the 8-10 km wide caldera about 7500 years ago were among Earth's largest known Holocene eruptions, distributing tephra as far away as Canada and producing pyroclastic flows that traveled 40 km from the volcano. A 5-km-wide ring fracture zone is thought to mark the original collapse diameter. The deep blue waters of North America's second deepest lake, at 600 m, fill the caldera to within 150-600 m of its rim. Post-caldera eruptions within a few hundred years of caldera formation constructed a series of small lava domes on the caldera floor, including the partially subaerial Wizard Island cinder cone, and the completely submerged Merriam Cone. The latest eruptions produced a small rhyodacitic lava dome beneath the lake surface east of Wizard Island about 4,200 years ago.

From Wikipedia

Crater Lake is a volcanic crater lake in south-central Oregon in the Western United States. It is the main feature of Crater Lake National Park and is a tourist attraction for its deep blue color and water clarity. The lake partly fills a 2,148-foot-deep (655 m) caldera that was formed around 7,700 years ago by the collapse of the volcano Mount Mazama. No rivers flow into or out of the lake; the evaporation is compensated for by rain and snowfall at a rate such that the total amount of water is replaced every 150 years. With a depth of 1,949 feet (594 m), the lake is the deepest in the United States. In the world, it ranks tenth for maximum depth, as well as fifth for mean depth.

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Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
5900 BCE~5709 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI 65709 BCE~5519 BCE · 2 eruptions · max VEI 75328 BCE~5137 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?3041 BCE~2850 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?5900 BCE5137 BCE4375 BCE3803 BCE3041 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 2850 BCEVEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 2850 – Ongoing
    Lava dome ENE of Wizard Island
  2. 5250 BCEVEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 5250 – Ongoing
    Wizard Island and Merriam Cone
  3. 5550 BCEVEI 0Geological estimate
    BCE 5550 – Ongoing
    Central Platform
  4. 5680 BCE (±150 yrs)VEI 7Geological estimate
    BCE 5680 – Ongoing
    Mt. Mazama summit and flank vents
  5. 5900 BCE (±50 yrs)VEI 6Geological estimate
    BCE 5900 – Ongoing
    North flank (Llao Rock)

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.