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Tanaga

Stratovulcano · United States · 1806 m

The three E-W-trending summit cones of the Tanaga volcanic complex, Sajaka, Tanaga, and East Tanaga (from left to right) are seen from the summit of Takawangha volcano. Tanaga is the central and highest of three at the NW tip of Tanaga Island. The ridge to the lower left is part of a caldera rim that formed by the collapse of an ancestral Tanaga edifice during the Pleistocene.
The three E-W-trending summit cones of the Tanaga volcanic complex, Sajaka, Tanaga, and East Tanaga (from left to right) are seen from the summit of Takawangha volcano. Tanaga is the central and highest of three at the NW tip of Tanaga Island. The ridge to the lower left is part of a caldera rim that formed by the collapse of an ancestral Tanaga edifice during the Pleistocene. · Foto: Photo by Michelle Coombs, 2003 (Alaska Volcano Observatory, U.S. Geological Survey). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Stratovulcano
Paese
United States
Regione
North America Volcanic Regions / Aleutian Ridge Volcanic Arc
Altitudine
1806 m
Coordinate
51.885, -178.146
Ultima eruzione
1914
Contesto tettonico
Subduction zone / Intermediate crust (15-25 km)
Forma vulcanica
Composite
Roccia principale
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Sintesi geologica

Tanaga volcano, the second largest volcanic center of the central Aleutians, is the central and highest of three youthful stratovolcanoes oriented along a roughly E-W line at the NW tip of Tanaga Island. Ridges to the east and south represent the rim of an arcuate caldera formed by collapse of an edifice during the Pleistocene. Most Holocene eruptions originated from Tanaga volcano itself, which consists of two large cones, the western of which is the highest, constructed within a caldera whose 400-m-high rim is prominent to the SE. At the westernmost end of the complex is conical Sajaka, a double cone that may be the youngest of the three volcanoes. Sajaka One volcano collapsed during the late Holocene, producing a debris avalanche that swept into the sea, after which the Sajaka Two cone was constructed within the collapse scarp.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

Riassunto in inglese

Tanaga is a 5,924-foot (1,806 m) stratovolcano in the Aleutian Range of the U.S. state of Alaska. There have been three known eruptions since 1763. The most recent was in 1914 and produced lava flows. It sits west of another stratovolcano known as Mount Takawangha, which last erupted in 1550.

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Storia delle eruzioni

Riepilogo (VEI nel tempo)
Fai clic su una barra per vedere le singole eruzioni
1050 BCE~852 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 0655 BCE~457 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?926~1124 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?1519~1716 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?1716~1914 · 4 eruzioni · VEI max. 01050 BCE260 BCE33311241716

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 1914VEI 0Osservata
    1914 – In corso
  2. 1829VEI ?Osservata
    1829 – In corso
  3. 1791VEI ?Stima geologica
    1791-06-07 – In corso
  4. 1763VEI ?Stima geologica
    1763 – 1770
  5. 1550VEI ?Stima geologica
    1550 – In corso
    Tanaga, Sajaka Two
  6. 1050VEI ?Stima geologica
    1050 – In corso
    Tanaga
  7. 550 a.C. (±2500 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 550 – In corso
    Sajaka One
  8. 1050 a.C.VEI 0Stima geologica
    BCE 1050 – In corso
    Sajaka One

Link esterni

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