Mount Michael
Saunders
Stratovolcano · United Kingdom · 843m

- Type
- Stratovolcano
- Country
- United Kingdom
- Region
- Antarctic-Scotia Volcanic Regions / South Sandwich Volcanic Arc
- Elevation
- 843m
- Coordinates
- -57.800, -26.483
- Last eruption
- 2026
- Tectonic setting
- Subduction zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
- Landform
- Composite
- Major rock type
- Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary
Saunders Island consists of a large central volcanic edifice intersected by two seamount chains, as shown by bathymetric mapping (Leat et al., 2013). The young Mount Michael stratovolcano dominates the glacier-covered island, while two submarine plateaus, Harpers Bank and Saunders Bank, extend north. The symmetrical Michael has a 500-m-wide summit crater and a remnant of a somma rim to the SE. Tephra layers visible in ice cliffs surrounding the island are evidence of recent eruptions. Ash clouds were reported from the summit crater in 1819, and an effusive eruption was inferred to have occurred from a N-flank fissure around the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century. A low ice-free lava platform, Blackstone Plain, is located on the north coast, surrounding a group of former sea stacks. A cluster of cones on the SE flank, the Ashen Hills, appear to have been modified since 1820 (LeMasurier and Thomson, 1990). Analysis of satellite imagery available since 1989 (Gray et al., 2019; MODVOLC) suggests frequent eruptive activity (when weather conditions allow), volcanic clouds, steam plumes, and thermal anomalies indicative of a persistent, or at least frequently active, lava lake in the summit crater. Due to this observational bias, there has been a presumption when defining eruptive periods that activity has been ongoing unless there is no evidence for at least 10 months.
From Wikipedia
Mount Michael is an active stratovolcano on Saunders Island in the remote South Sandwich Islands of the South Atlantic Ocean. It is one of only a few volcanoes on Earth confirmed to host a persistent lava lake within its summit crater.
Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article →
Eruption history
Detailed timeline
- 2014VEI 1Observed2014-11-12 – 2026-02-23Mount Michael summit crater
- 2000VEI 0Observed2000-05-13 – 2013-11-16
- 1999VEI 0Observed1999-01-19 – 1999-01-19
- 1995VEI 0Observed1995-04-16 – 1998-02-16
- 1989VEI 0Observed1989-01-30 – 1990-03-22
- 1900 (±10 yrs)VEI 0Geological estimate1900 – OngoingNorth flank
- 1823VEI 2Geological estimate1823 – Ongoing
- 1819VEI 2Observed1819-12-29 – Ongoing
External links
⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.