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Mount Martin

Martin

Estratovolcán · United States · 1863 m

Mount Martin is located at the southern end of the group of volcanoes in the Katmai area. Gases rise from the summit crater and sulfur has accumulated on the snow and ice in this 1990 view. The crater, which opens to the east, is the site of intense fumarolic activity and sometimes contains a small crater lake.
Mount Martin is located at the southern end of the group of volcanoes in the Katmai area. Gases rise from the summit crater and sulfur has accumulated on the snow and ice in this 1990 view. The crater, which opens to the east, is the site of intense fumarolic activity and sometimes contains a small crater lake. · Foto: Photo by Christina Neal, 1990 (U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Volcano Observatory). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Estratovolcán
País
United States
Región
América del Norte / Alaska Peninsula Volcanic Arc
Altitud
1863 m
Coordenadas
58.172, -155.361
Última erupción
1953
Contexto tectónico
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma volcánica
Composite
Roca principal
Dacite
Resumen geológico

The mostly ice-covered Mount Martin stratovolcano lies at the SW end of the Katmai volcano cluster in Katmai National Park. The volcano was named for George C. Martin, the first person to visit and describe the area after the 1912 eruption. It is capped by a 300-m-wide summit crater, which is ice-free because of an almost-constant steam plume; it also contains a shallow acidic lake. The edifice was constructed entirely during the Holocene, and overlies glaciated lava flows of the adjacent mid- to late-Pleistocene Alagoshak volcano to the WSW. Martin consists of a small fragmental cone that was the source of ten thick overlapping blocky dacitic lava flows, largely uneroded by glaciers, that descend 10 km to the NW, cover 31 km2, and form about 95% of the eruptive volume of the volcano. Two reports of historical eruptions that originated from uncertain sources were attributed by Muller et al. (1954) to Martin.

Historial de erupciones

Resumen (VEI en el tiempo)
Haga clic en una barra para ver erupciones individuales
1750 BCE~1555 BCE · 1 erupciones · VEI máx. ?970 BCE~776 BCE · 1 erupciones · VEI máx. ?1758~1953 · 2 erupciones · VEI máx. ?1750 BCE776 BCE49791758

Línea de tiempo detallada

  1. 1953VEI ?Estimación geológica
    1953-02-17 – En curso
    Volcano Uncertain: SW of Trident; probably Martin
  2. 1951VEI ?Estimación geológica
    1951-07-22 – En curso
    Volcano Uncertain: Kukak Bay ashfall; probably Martin
  3. 800 a. C. (±50 años)VEI ?Estimación geológica
    BCE 800 – En curso
  4. 1750 a. C.VEI ?Estimación geológica
    BCE 1750 – En curso

Enlaces externos

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