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Tutuila

Cono di tufo · United States · 653 m

Cliffs and an offshore island mark the rugged coastline of Tutuila Island. The elongated, extensively eroded Tutuila in the center of the Samoan Islands consists of five Pliocene-to-Pleistocene volcanoes constructed along rifts trending SSW-NNE. Following a lengthy period of erosion, submergence, and the construction of a barrier reef, the Leone volcanics were erupted during the Holocene along a 5-km-long N-S-trending fissure, forming a group of scoria cones that produced pahoehoe lava flows.
Cliffs and an offshore island mark the rugged coastline of Tutuila Island. The elongated, extensively eroded Tutuila in the center of the Samoan Islands consists of five Pliocene-to-Pleistocene volcanoes constructed along rifts trending SSW-NNE. Following a lengthy period of erosion, submergence, and the construction of a barrier reef, the Leone volcanics were erupted during the Holocene along a 5-km-long N-S-trending fissure, forming a group of scoria cones that produced pahoehoe lava flows. · Foto: Photo by Tavita Togia, 2004 (U. S. National Park Service). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Cono di tufo
Paese
United States
Regione
Southern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Samoan Hotspot Volcano Group
Altitudine
653 m
Coordinate
-14.290, -170.702
Ultima eruzione
440
Contesto tettonico
Subduction zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Forma vulcanica
Cluster
Roccia principale
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Sintesi geologica

The elongated, extensively eroded Tutuila Island in the center of the Samoan Islands consists of five Pliocene-to-Pleistocene volcanoes constructed along two or three rifts trending SSW-NNE. The Pago basaltic-to-andesitic shield volcano in the center of the 32-km-long island is truncated by an eroded, 9-km-wide caldera that encloses Pago Pago harbor on its west. The caldera is now partially filled by cinder cones and trachytic lava domes. ENE-trending dike complexes are prominently exposed on Pago volcano. Following a lengthy period of erosion, submergence, and the construction of a barrier reef, the Leone Volcanics were erupted during the Holocene along a 5-km-long N-S-trending fissure over a broad area at the southernmost part of the island (Stearns, 1944), forming a group of initially submarine tuff cones and subsequent subaerial cinder cones that produced fresh-looking pahoehoe lava flows. An ash layer overlying a cultural deposit in the SW part of the island was radiocarbon dated at about 440 +/- 200 CE (Addison et al., 2006).

Sintesi da Wikipedia

Tutuila è un'isola di origine vulcanica situata nel Pacifico meridionale che fa parte dell'arcipelago delle Isole Samoa, a sua volta compreso nella regione della Polinesia. Terza per estensione, è amministrativamente parte delle Samoa Americane, appartenenti agli Stati Uniti d'America.

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Storia delle eruzioni

Riepilogo (VEI nel tempo)
Fai clic su una barra per vedere le singole eruzioni
440~440 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 3440440441441441

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 440 (±200 anni)VEI 3Stima geologica
    440 – In corso
    Cones E of Pava'ia'i Village

Link esterni

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