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Escanaba Segment

Fissure vent · United States · 1700m (submarine)

A NOAA/PMEL map shows the setting of the Escanaba Segment at the southern end of the Gorda Ridge west of the coast of northern California. The linear N-S-trending segment is the southernmost of the five segments of the Gorda Ridge, and lies immediately north of the Mendocino Fracture Zone. The axial crest of the 130-km-long segment, also known as the Escanaba Trough, is about 3-5 km wide at the northern end and widens to 18 km in the south near the junction with the Mendocino Fracture Zone.
A NOAA/PMEL map shows the setting of the Escanaba Segment at the southern end of the Gorda Ridge west of the coast of northern California. The linear N-S-trending segment is the southernmost of the five segments of the Gorda Ridge, and lies immediately north of the Mendocino Fracture Zone. The axial crest of the 130-km-long segment, also known as the Escanaba Trough, is about 3-5 km wide at the northern end and widens to 18 km in the south near the junction with the Mendocino Fracture Zone. · Photo: Courtesy of NOAA NeMo Observatory.
Type
Fissure vent
Country
United States
Region
Eastern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Northeast Pacific Rifts Volcanic Province
Elevation
1700m (submarine)
Coordinates
40.980, -127.500
Last eruption
-2260
Tectonic setting
Rift zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Landform
Cluster
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

The linear, N-S-trending Escanaba Segment, the southernmost of the Gorda Ridge, lies immediately north of the Mendocino Francture Zone off the coast of northern California. The axial crest of the 130-km-long segment, also known as the Escanaba Trough, is about 3-5 km wide at the northern end and increases to 18 km to the south near the junction with the Mendocino FZ. The rift valley floor of the slow-spreading segment lies at about 3,200 m depth, bounded by faulted walls about 1,500 m high with unusual gold-bearing massive sulfide deposits in sediment hills at the base of the scarps uplifted by volcanic sills or lacoliths. Thick sediment deposits from the continental margin enter the axial trough from the fracture zone and thin to the north. A preliminary uranium-series date of Holocene age was obtained from a basaltic lava flow in the axial valley in the less-sedimented northern part.

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
2260 BCE~2260 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI 02260 BCE2260 BCE2259 BCE2259 BCE2259 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 2260 BCEVEI 0Geological estimate
    BCE 2260 – Ongoing
    40 deg 59 min North

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.