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Mount Melbourne

Melbourne

Stratovolcano · Antarctica · 2732m

Mount Melbourne towers above the ice shelf of the Ross Sea in Antarctica's Northern Victoria Land. The glaciated edifice contains a large number of scoria cones, lava domes, and viscous lava flows. Lava fields are exposed at the summit and upper flanks. Fumarolic activity has been observed and there are corresponding tephra layers within and on top of surrounding ice layers.
Mount Melbourne towers above the ice shelf of the Ross Sea in Antarctica's Northern Victoria Land. The glaciated edifice contains a large number of scoria cones, lava domes, and viscous lava flows. Lava fields are exposed at the summit and upper flanks. Fumarolic activity has been observed and there are corresponding tephra layers within and on top of surrounding ice layers. · Photo: Photo by Arrigo Caserta, 2000 (Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Roma). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Stratovolcano
Country
Antarctica
Region
Antarctic-Scotia Volcanic Regions / McMurdo Volcanic Province
Elevation
2732m
Coordinates
-74.350, 164.700
Last eruption
1892
Tectonic setting
Intraplate / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Composite
Major rock type
Trachyte / Trachydacite
Geological summary

Mount Melbourne is a large undissected stratovolcano along the western coast of the Ross Sea in Antarctica's northern Victoria Land. The glacier-covered edifice lies at the center of a volcanic field containing both subglacial and subaerial vents along a dominantly N-S trend. A large number of scoria cones, lava domes, viscous lava flows, and lava fields are exposed at the summit and upper flanks. A number of very young-looking cones are located at the summit and on the flanks. Tephra layers are found within and on top of ice layers, and the most recent eruption was estimated to have occurred between 1862 and 1922. The volcano displays fumarolic activity that is concentrated along a NNE-SSW line cutting through the summit area and along a line of phreatomagmatic craters on the southern rim of the summit crater. Prominent ice towers and pinnacles were formed from steam condensation around fumarolic vents.

From Wikipedia

Mount Melbourne is a 2,733-metre-high (8,967 ft) ice-covered stratovolcano in Victoria Land, Antarctica, between Wood Bay and Terra Nova Bay. It is an elongated mountain with a summit caldera filled with ice with numerous parasitic vents; a volcanic field surrounds the edifice. Mount Melbourne has a volume of about 180 cubic kilometres (43 cu mi) and consists of tephra deposits and lava flows; tephra deposits are also found encased within ice and have been used to date the last eruption of Mount Melbourne to 1892 ± 30 years. The volcano is fumarolically active.

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Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
1892~1892 · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?18921892189318931893

Detailed timeline

  1. 1892 (±30 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    1892 – Ongoing

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.