Isla Macauley
Macauley
Caldera · New Zealand · 238 m
- 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
Línea de tiempo detallada
- 1887VEI 0Estimación geológica1887-12-01 – En curso22 km NNE of Macauley Island
- 1825VEI 0Estimación geológica1825-09-06 – En curso"Brimstone Island," W of Macauley Island
- 4360 a. C. (±200 años)VEI 6Estimación geológicaBCE 4360 – En curso
Enlaces externos
⚠ Solo como referencia. No apto para respuesta ante emergencias.