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Isla Macauley

Macauley

Caldera · New Zealand · 238 m

The submersible vessel Pisces V surfaces in the foreground after a dive in front of Macauley Island during a 2005 New Zealand-American NOAA Ocean Explorer research expedition to the Kermadec Arc. This view from the NW shows a prominent white band in the cliff face that is made of dacite pyroclastic flow deposits. The 3-km-wide Macauley Island is a remnant of the rim of a large submarine caldera centered 8 km to the NW and has a low, gently sloping surface truncated by steep cliffs.
The submersible vessel Pisces V surfaces in the foreground after a dive in front of Macauley Island during a 2005 New Zealand-American NOAA Ocean Explorer research expedition to the Kermadec Arc. This view from the NW shows a prominent white band in the cliff face that is made of dacite pyroclastic flow deposits. The 3-km-wide Macauley Island is a remnant of the rim of a large submarine caldera centered 8 km to the NW and has a low, gently sloping surface truncated by steep cliffs. · Foto: Image courtesy of NOAA, 2005 (http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/05fire). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Caldera
País
New Zealand
Región
Tonga y Kermadec / Middle Kermadec Volcanic Arc
Altitud
238 m
Coordenadas
-30.210, -178.475
Última erupción
-4360
Contexto tectónico
Subduction zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Forma volcánica
Caldera
Roca principal
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Resumen geológico

Macauley Island is a rim remnant of a large submarine caldera centered 8 km to the NW. The 2-km-diameter island consists of a low, gently sloping surface of rhyolitic pumice from the caldera-forming eruption truncated by steep cliffs formed of underlying basaltic lava flows. The pre-caldera edifice consisted of two generations of shield volcanoes separated by a period of pyroclastic cone growth. Eruption of the voluminous Sandy Bay Tuff about 6,300 years ago truncated the NW side of the Annexation shield volcano and formed a 12-km-wide, 1.1-km deep caldera. Following formation of the caldera and substantial marine erosion, a partly submarine and partly subaerial eruption centered about 2 km N of present-day Macauley Island produced basaltic scoriae and lava flows. A reported possible eruption in 1825 from "Brimstone Island," 45 km W of Macauley at a location with a depth of about 2,000 m and SW of Giggenbach submarine volcano, is likely a location error and could refer to an eruption from the submarine flank of Macauley caldera (Lloyd et al., 1996).

Historial de erupciones

Resumen (VEI en el tiempo)
Haga clic en una barra para ver erupciones individuales
4360 BCE~4152 BCE · 1 erupciones · VEI máx. 61679~1887 · 2 erupciones · VEI máx. 04360 BCE2902 BCE1236 BCE2211679

Línea de tiempo detallada

  1. 1887VEI 0Estimación geológica
    1887-12-01 – En curso
    22 km NNE of Macauley Island
  2. 1825VEI 0Estimación geológica
    1825-09-06 – En curso
    "Brimstone Island," W of Macauley Island
  3. 4360 a. C. (±200 años)VEI 6Estimación geológica
    BCE 4360 – En curso

Enlaces externos

⚠ Solo como referencia. No apto para respuesta ante emergencias.