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Mount Berlin

Berlin

Shield volcano · Antarctica · 3478m

Mount Berlin is seen here from Mount Moulton to the east and is located in the Flood Range of Marie Byrd Land, near the eastern coast of the Ross Sea. Major features include Berlin Crater and Merrem Peak, with active fumaroles around the western and northern Berlin Crater rims.
Mount Berlin is seen here from Mount Moulton to the east and is located in the Flood Range of Marie Byrd Land, near the eastern coast of the Ross Sea. Major features include Berlin Crater and Merrem Peak, with active fumaroles around the western and northern Berlin Crater rims. · Photo: Photo by Oscar González-Ferrán (University of Chile). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Shield volcano
Country
Antarctica
Region
Antarctic-Scotia Volcanic Regions / Western Antarctica Volcanic Province
Elevation
3478m
Coordinates
-76.050, -136.000
Last eruption
-8350
Tectonic setting
Intraplate / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Shield
Major rock type
Trachyte / Trachydacite
Geological summary

Mount Berlin consists of two coalescing shield volcanoes, Berlin Crater and Merrem Peak, each with a 2-km-wide summit caldera. Mount Berlin is located in the Flood Range of Marie Byrd Land, near the eastern coast of the Ross Sea. The two calderas are oriented along an east-west line, characteristic of Flood Range volcanoes. The westernmost and highest volcano, Berlin Crater, reaches 3478 m and is located 3.5 km ESE of Merrem Peak caldera. Berlin Crater displays active fumaroles along its western and northern caldera rims, producing the characteristic Antarctic fumarolic ice towers. The youngest dated tephra of a series of tephra layers in glacial ice at Mount Moulton that was attributed to Mount Berlin had an age of about 14.5 +/- 3.8 thousand years (ka), and a younger undated tephra layer was present. A lava flow at the base of an ice cave below a fumarolic ice tower was dated at about 10.3 +/- 2.7 ka.

From Wikipedia

Mount Berlin is a glacier-covered volcano in Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica, 100 kilometres (62 mi) from the Amundsen Sea. It is a roughly 20-kilometre-wide (12 mi) mountain with parasitic vents that consists of two coalesced volcanoes: Berlin proper with the 2-kilometre-wide (1.2 mi) Berlin Crater and Merrem Peak with a 2.5-by-1-kilometre-wide crater, 3.5 kilometres (2.2 mi) away from Berlin. The summit of the volcano is 3,478 metres (11,411 ft) above sea level. It has a volume of 200 cubic kilometres (48 mi3) and rises from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. It is part of the Marie Byrd Land Volcanic Province. Trachyte is the dominant volcanic rock and occurs in the form of lava flows and pyroclastic rocks.

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Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
8350 BCE~8350 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI 08350 BCE8350 BCE8349 BCE8349 BCE8349 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 8350 BCE (±5300 yrs)VEI 0Geological estimate
    BCE 8350 – Ongoing

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.