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Green Mountain

Ascension

Stratovolcano · United Kingdom · 822m

A view to the NW from Green Mountain shows The Sisters (left) and Perfect Crater (right-center), cinder cones on the flanks of the Ascensión Island volcano, which lies just west of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. The isolated island contains numerous cones and lava domes. Many volcanic features on Ascensión have a very youthful appearance, and three eruptions have been dated within the past 2,000 years, the most recent being the South Sisters flow, possibly only 500 years old.
A view to the NW from Green Mountain shows The Sisters (left) and Perfect Crater (right-center), cinder cones on the flanks of the Ascensión Island volcano, which lies just west of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. The isolated island contains numerous cones and lava domes. Many volcanic features on Ascensión have a very youthful appearance, and three eruptions have been dated within the past 2,000 years, the most recent being the South Sisters flow, possibly only 500 years old. · Photo: Photo by Jon Davidson (University of Durham). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Stratovolcano
Country
United Kingdom
Region
Atlantic Ocean Volcanic Regions / Central Mid-Atlantic Rift Volcanic Province
Elevation
822m
Coordinates
-7.946, -14.367
Last eruption
1508
Tectonic setting
Rift zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Landform
Composite
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

Ascensión Island, just west of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge ~2,250 km E of the eastern-most point of Brazil, is the 12-km-diameter emergent summit of a stratovolcano that rises ~3,000 m above the seafloor. The isolated island has more than 100 youthful cones and lava domes, many aligned along two fissures. Basaltic rocks dominate on the island, but trachytic lava domes are also present, mostly on the eastern side. Two of the youngest lava flows were erupted from flank vents and reached the sea on the N and S coasts. Argon-Argon dating by Preece and others (2018) identified three eruptions within the past 2,000 years. No eruptive activity has occurred since it was visited on Ascensión Day in 1501 by the Portuguese navigator Joao da Nova.

From Wikipedia

Green Mountain is a common name for "The Peak", the highest point and a stratovolcano on Ascension Island, which has gained some fame for claims that it is one of very few large-scale artificial forests. Green Mountain is ranked 38th by topographic isolation.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
378~491 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 01395~1508 · 2 eruptions · max VEI 037860494311691395

Detailed timeline

  1. 1508 (±180 yrs)VEI 0Geological estimate
    1508 – Ongoing
    South Sisters lava flow
  2. 1468 (±120 yrs)VEI 0Geological estimate
    1468 – Ongoing
    Comfortless Cove lava flow
  3. 378 (±370 yrs)VEI 0Geological estimate
    378 – Ongoing
    Davidson lava flow

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.