Cráteres Mono-Inyo
Mono-Inyo Craters
Domo de lava · United States · 2796 m

- Tipo
- Domo de lava
- País
- United States
- Región
- América del Norte / Basin and Range Volcanic Province
- Altitud
- 2796 m
- Coordenadas
- 37.804, -119.029
- Última erupción
- 1380
- Contexto tectónico
- Rift zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
- Forma volcánica
- Cluster
- Roca principal
- Rhyolite
Resumen geológico
The Mono-Inyo Craters chain, on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada between Mono Lake and Long Valley caldera, form a sickle-shaped, 25-km-long group of 35 dominantly rhyolitic lava domes, lava flows, and tephra rings. The partially overlapping dike-fed domes of the Mono Craters at the north end were erupted near the margin of a pull-apart basin. Explosive eruptions began more than 50,000 years ago from now-buried vents, but almost all of the exposed domes and flows are of Holocene age. Activity propagated both north and south from the center of the chain during the late Holocene. The latest eruptions occurred nearly contemporaneously about 600 years ago from the Panum Crater area at the northern end of the Mono Craters and from the Inyo Craters to the south, producing a series of tephra rings and obsidian lava domes and flows accompanied by deposition of locally extensive tephra layers and the formation of several phreatic explosion craters at the southern end of the Inyo Craters. The latest eruptions at Inyo Craters about 600 years ago produced explosive eruptions accompanied by formation of the South Deadman, Obsidian Flow, and Glass Creek rhyolitic lava domes and lava flows. The Inyo Crater Lakes are small phreatic craters that formed during this eruption on the south flank of the Pleistocene Deer Mountain rhyolite dome of the Long Valley caldera.
Resumen de Wikipedia
Resumen en inglésThe Mono–Inyo Craters are a volcanic chain of craters, domes and lava flows in Mono County, Eastern California, United States. The chain stretches 25 miles (40 km) from the northwest shore of Mono Lake to the south of Mammoth Mountain. The Mono Lake Volcanic Field forms the northernmost part of the chain and consists of two volcanic islands in the lake and one cinder cone volcano on its northwest shore. Most of the Mono Craters, which make up the bulk of the northern part of the Mono–Inyo chain, are phreatic volcanoes that have since been either plugged or over-topped by rhyolite domes and lava flows. The Inyo volcanic chain form much of the southern part of the chain and consist of phreatic explosion pits, and rhyolitic lava flows and domes. The southernmost part of the chain consists of fumaroles and explosion pits on Mammoth Mountain and a set of cinder cones south of the mountain; the latter are called the Red Cones.
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Historial de erupciones
Línea de tiempo detallada
- 1380 (±50 años)VEI 4Estimación geológica1380 – En cursoInyo Craters (S Deadman, Obsidian, Glass Creek)
- 1350 (±20 años)VEI 4Estimación geológica1350 – En cursoMono Craters (Panum Crater, nearby vents)
- 1000 (±200 años)VEI ?Estimación geológica1000 – En cursoMono Craters (dome on NW edge of NW Coulee)
- 620 (±27 años)VEI 4Estimación geológica620 – En cursoSouthern Mono Craters (South Coulee area)
- 490 (±100 años)VEI ?Estimación geológica490 – En cursoMono Craters (NW Coulee and Pumice Pit dome)
- 440 (±100 años)VEI ?Estimación geológica440 – En cursoSouthern Mono Craters
- 320 (±200 años)VEI ?Estimación geológica320 – En cursoMono Craters (South Coulee?)
- 290 (±50 años)VEI 3Estimación geológica290 – En cursoInyo Craters (Wilson Butte)
- 10 (±200 años)VEI ?Estimación geológica10 – En cursoMono Craters (South Coulee?)
- 700 a. C. (±800 años)VEI ?Estimación geológicaBCE 700 – En cursoCentral Mono Craters
- 3850 a. C. (±1160 años)VEI ?Estimación geológicaBCE 3850 – En cursoMono Craters (crater N of Punchbowl)
- 4050 a. C.VEI ?Estimación geológicaBCE 4050 – En cursoInyo Craters (N of Deadman Creek)
- 6750 a. C. (±1740 años)VEI ?Estimación geológicaBCE 6750 – En cursoMono Craters (Punchbowl)
Enlaces externos
⚠ Solo como referencia. No apto para respuesta ante emergencias.