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Bouvet Island

Bouvet

Shield volcano · Norway · 741m

The uninhabited shield volcano of Bouvet Island is depicted from the SE in this 26 November  1898 watercolor painting. About 95% of the 10-km-wide island is glaciated, and sampling on this basaltic-to-rhyolitic volcano has been restricted to coastal cliffs. A caldera on the opposite (NW) side of the island is breached to the sea. Bouvet, also referred to as Bouvetoya, is located just off the Southwest Indian Ridge, east of the triple junction between the African, South American, and Antarctic plates.
The uninhabited shield volcano of Bouvet Island is depicted from the SE in this 26 November 1898 watercolor painting. About 95% of the 10-km-wide island is glaciated, and sampling on this basaltic-to-rhyolitic volcano has been restricted to coastal cliffs. A caldera on the opposite (NW) side of the island is breached to the sea. Bouvet, also referred to as Bouvetoya, is located just off the Southwest Indian Ridge, east of the triple junction between the African, South American, and Antarctic plates. · Photo: Watercolor painting by F. Winter, 1898 (In: Chun, 1903; courtesy of NOAA Photo Library). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Shield volcano
Country
Norway
Region
Atlantic Ocean Volcanic Regions / Southern Atlantic Volcano Group
Elevation
741m
Coordinates
-54.408, 3.351
Last eruption
-50
Tectonic setting
Rift zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Landform
Shield
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

The solitary ice-covered shield volcano of Bouvet Island is located just off the Southwest Indian Ridge, east of the triple junction between the African, South American, and Antarctic plates. This basaltic-to-rhyolitic island, also referred to as Bouvetoya, was discovered by and later named for Captain Lozier-Bouvet during his 1739 search for the "great southern continent." About 95% of the uninhabited 10-km-wide island is covered by glaciers. The most prominent feature is the 3.5-km-wide Wilhelmplataet caldera, which is breached to the sea on the NW side. A late-stage rhyolitic lava dome forms the Cape Valdivia peninsula on the N flank. A paleomagnetic investigation was made by Lovlie and Furnes (1978) of a massive basaltic lava flow unit at Cape Meteor; based on oriented drill cores they tentatively inferred a minimum age of 2000 years.

From Wikipedia

Bouvet Island is an uninhabited subantarctic volcanic island and dependency of Norway. A protected nature reserve situated in the South Atlantic Ocean at the southern end of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, it is the world's most remote island. Located north of 60°S latitude, Bouvet Island is not part of the southern region covered by the Antarctic Treaty System.

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Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
50 BCE~50 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI 050 BCE50 BCE49 BCE49 BCE49 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 50 BCEVEI 0Geological estimate
    BCE 50 – Ongoing

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.