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Lago Towada

Towada

Caldera · Japan · 1011 m

The 11-km-wide lake-filled Towada caldera, whose far northern wall is seen here in the distance, formed during a series of major explosive eruptions over a 40,000-year period ending about 13,000 years ago. The peninsula across the center is the rim of Nakanoumi caldera that formed by the collapse of the Goshikiiwa cone. The Ogurayama dome to the upper right was the source of the 915 CE eruption.
The 11-km-wide lake-filled Towada caldera, whose far northern wall is seen here in the distance, formed during a series of major explosive eruptions over a 40,000-year period ending about 13,000 years ago. The peninsula across the center is the rim of Nakanoumi caldera that formed by the collapse of the Goshikiiwa cone. The Ogurayama dome to the upper right was the source of the 915 CE eruption. · Foto: Photo by Yukio Hayakawa (Gunma University). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Caldera
Paese
Japan
Regione
Northwestern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Northeast Japan Volcanic Arc
Altitudine
1011 m
Coordinate
40.510, 140.880
Ultima eruzione
915
Contesto tettonico
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma vulcanica
Caldera
Roccia principale
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Sintesi geologica

The lake-filled, 11-km-wide, Towada caldera in northern Honshu formed during as many as six major explosive eruptions over a 40,000-year period ending about 13,000 years ago. Pre-caldera eruptive activity dates back about 2 million years and produced basaltic-to-dacitic lava cones. Following late-Pleistocene andesitic-to-rhyolitic caldera-forming eruptions, the basaltic Ninokura stratovolcano grew in the SSE section of the caldera. Successive dacitic-to-rhyolitic explosive eruptions from the Goshikiiwa cone led to the formation of the roughly 2-km-wide Nakanoumi caldera, whose SW and NE rims form peninsulas extending into Lake Towada. The andesitic-to-dacitic Ogurayama lava dome was built over the NE rim of Nakanoumi. The latest eruption took place in 915 CE, when eruptions from Ogurayama produced widespread ashfall and pyroclastic flows.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

Il lago Towada è un lago vulcanico giapponese, situato nel parco nazionale di Towada-Hachimantai.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Leggi l'articolo completo

Storia delle eruzioni

Riepilogo (VEI nel tempo)
Fai clic su una barra per vedere le singole eruzioni
9490 BCE~9143 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 38449 BCE~8103 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 57409 BCE~7062 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 56368 BCE~6022 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 45675 BCE~5328 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 34287 BCE~3941 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 5819 BCE~472 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 4568~915 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 59490 BCE7062 BCE4287 BCE1860 BCE568

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 915VEI 5Osservata
    915-08-17 – In corso
    Goshikiiwa (NE rim Nakanoumi crater)
  2. 750 a.C.VEI 4Stima geologica
    BCE 750 – In corso
    Nakanoumi
  3. 4150 a.C.VEI 5Stima geologica
    BCE 4150 – In corso
    Goshikiiwa (Nakanoumi)
  4. 5550 a.C.VEI 3Stima geologica
    BCE 5550 – In corso
    Goshikiiwa
  5. 6250 a.C.VEI 4Stima geologica
    BCE 6250 – In corso
    Goshikiiwa
  6. 7250 a.C.VEI 5Stima geologica
    BCE 7250 – In corso
    Goshikiiwa
  7. 8250 a.C.VEI 5Stima geologica
    BCE 8250 – In corso
    Goshikiiwa
  8. 9490 a.C.VEI 3Stima geologica
    BCE 9490 – In corso
    Nakanoumi

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