Saltar al contenido principal

Islas Maug

Maug Islands

Estratovolcán · United States · 227 m

An aerial view of the Maug Islands from the NE shows Kitashima (North Island) at the right margin, Higashishima (East Island) in the foreground, and Nishishima (West Island) in the background. The islands enclose a 2.5-km-wide submarine caldera containing a lava dome that rises to within about 20 m of the ocean surface.
An aerial view of the Maug Islands from the NE shows Kitashima (North Island) at the right margin, Higashishima (East Island) in the foreground, and Nishishima (West Island) in the background. The islands enclose a 2.5-km-wide submarine caldera containing a lava dome that rises to within about 20 m of the ocean surface. · Foto: Photo by Dick Moore, 1990 (U. S. Geological Survey). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Estratovolcán
País
United States
Región
Pacífico Noroccidental / Mariana Volcanic Arc
Altitud
227 m
Coordenadas
20.020, 145.220
Última erupción
Desconocido
Contexto tectónico
Subduction zone / Crustal thickness unknown
Forma volcánica
Composite
Roca principal
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Resumen geológico

The three small elongated Maug Islands, the largest ~2.3 km long, represent the rim of a 2.5-km-wide caldera on a submarine edifice more than 20 km in diameter. The caldera has an average submarine depth of about 200 m and contains a central lava dome that rises to within about 20 m of the ocean surface. The truncated inner walls of the caldera on all three islands expose lava flows and pyroclastic deposits that are cut by radial dikes; bedded ash deposits overlie the outer flanks of the islands. No eruptions are known since the islands were documented by Espinosa in 1522 CE. The presence of poorly developed coral reefs and coral on the central lava dome suggests a long period of general quiescence, although it does not exclude mild eruptions (Corwin, 1971). A 2003 NOAA expedition detected possible evidence of submarine geothermal activity.

Resumen de Wikipedia

Las Islas Maug son tres islas deshabitadas pertenecientes al Municipio de las Islas del Norte, en Islas Marianas del Norte. Las tres islas son los puntos más altos de la caldera de un volcán sumergido. En el lugar en que estaría el pico del volcán hay una profunda y espaciosa bahía natural. Altos acantilados bordean las islas y el paisaje de las islas del Norte y el Oeste está dominado por columnas de basalto.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Leer artículo completo

Historial de erupciones

Línea de tiempo detallada

No hay registros de erupciones disponibles.

Enlaces externos

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