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Medicine Lake Volcano

Medicine Lake

Shield volcano · United States · 2412m

The massive Medicine Lake volcano in NE California, seen here from the NE, encompasses a 50 x 80 km wide area. Holocene eruptions included obsidian flows from summit and flank vents, and voluminous basaltic lava flows from vents on the north and south flanks. Recent eruptions took place about 900 years ago. The summit area includes a 7 x 11 km caldera.
The massive Medicine Lake volcano in NE California, seen here from the NE, encompasses a 50 x 80 km wide area. Holocene eruptions included obsidian flows from summit and flank vents, and voluminous basaltic lava flows from vents on the north and south flanks. Recent eruptions took place about 900 years ago. The summit area includes a 7 x 11 km caldera. · Photo: Photo by Julie Donnely-Nolan, 1982 (U.S. Geological Survey). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Shield volcano
Country
United States
Region
North America Volcanic Regions / High Cascades Volcanic Arc
Elevation
2412m
Coordinates
41.611, -121.554
Last eruption
1060
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Shield
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

Medicine Lake is a large Pleistocene-to-Holocene, basaltic-to-rhyolitic shield volcano east of the main axis of the Cascade Range. Volcanism, similar in style to that of Newberry volcano in Oregon, began less than one million years ago. A roughly 7 x 12 km caldera truncating the summit contains a lake that gives the volcano its name. A series of young eruptions lasting a few hundred years began about 10,500 years before present (BP) and produced 5 km3 of basaltic lava. Nine Holocene eruptions clustered during three eruptive episodes at about 5000, 3000, and 1000 years ago produced a chemically varied group of basaltic lava flows from flank vents and silicic obsidian flows from vents within the caldera and on the upper flanks. The last eruption produced the massive Glass Mountain obsidian flow on the E flank about 900 years BP. Lava Beds National Monument on the N flank of Medicine Lake shield volcano contains hundreds of lava-tube caves displaying a variety of spectacular lava-flow features, most of which are found in the voluminous Mammoth Crater lava flow, which extends in several lobes up to 24 km from the vent.

From Wikipedia

Medicine Lake Volcano is a large shield volcano in northeastern California about 30 mi (50 km) northeast of Mount Shasta. The volcano is located in a zone of east–west crustal extension east of the main axis of the Cascade Volcanic Arc and the Cascade Range. The 0.6 mi (1 km) thick shield is 30 mi (50 km) from east to west and 50 mi (80 km) from north to south, and covers more than 800 sq mi (2,200 km2). The underlying rock has downwarped by 0.3 mi (0.5 km) under the center of the volcano. The volcano is primarily composed of basalt and basaltic andesite lava flows, and has a 4 by 7 mi caldera at the center.

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Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
3190 BCE~2994 BCE · 2 eruptions · max VEI 01228 BCE~1032 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI 01032 BCE~836 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?733~929 · 3 eruptions · max VEI ?929~1125 · 2 eruptions · max VEI 31714~1910 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 13190 BCE2013 BCE640 BCE5371714

Detailed timeline

  1. 1910VEI 1Geological estimate
    1910-01 – Ongoing
    East flank (Glass Mountain ?)
  2. 1060VEI 3Geological estimate
    1060 – Ongoing
    Upper east flank (Glass Mountain)
  3. 1010VEI 3Geological estimate
    1010 – Ongoing
    SW flank (Little Glass Mountain)
  4. 840VEI ?Geological estimate
    840 – Ongoing
    SW flank (Paint Pot Crater)
  5. 830VEI ?Geological estimate
    830 – Ongoing
    North flank
  6. 780VEI ?Geological estimate
    780 – Ongoing
    NE caldera rim (Mt. Hoffman area)
  7. 1000 BCEVEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 1000 – Ongoing
    SE flank
  8. 1130 BCEVEI 0Geological estimate
    BCE 1130 – Ongoing
    Lower north flank (Black Crater)
  9. 3090 BCEVEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 3090 – Ongoing
    SE caldera rim
  10. 3190 BCEVEI 0Geological estimate
    BCE 3190 – Ongoing
    NW caldera floor (Medicine Lake Glass flow)

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.