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Mount Kaguyak

Kaguyak

Duomo di lava · United States · 901 m

The small 2.5-km-wide Kaguyak caldera is filled by a lake that reaches 550 m below the caldera rim, seen here from the west. A lava dome extends into the lake on the SW side and another dome forms a small island in the center of the lake. The voluminous caldera-forming deposits have been radiocarbon dated at 5,800 years old. A large pre-caldera lava dome forms the high point on the eastern caldera rim. The broad valley of Big River descends to Shelikof Strait to the upper right.
The small 2.5-km-wide Kaguyak caldera is filled by a lake that reaches 550 m below the caldera rim, seen here from the west. A lava dome extends into the lake on the SW side and another dome forms a small island in the center of the lake. The voluminous caldera-forming deposits have been radiocarbon dated at 5,800 years old. A large pre-caldera lava dome forms the high point on the eastern caldera rim. The broad valley of Big River descends to Shelikof Strait to the upper right. · Foto: Photo by Chris Nye, 1982 (Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys, Alaska Volcano Observatory). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Duomo di lava
Paese
United States
Regione
North America Volcanic Regions / Alaska Peninsula Volcanic Arc
Altitudine
901 m
Coordinate
58.611, -154.024
Ultima eruzione
-3850
Contesto tettonico
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma vulcanica
Caldera
Roccia principale
Dacite
Sintesi geologica

The 2.5-km-wide Kaguyak caldera in the NE part of Katmai National Park is filled by a lake more than 180 m deep whose surface lies 550 m below the caldera rim. The volcano rises directly from lowland areas near sea level south of the Big River. Initially considered to be a typical stratovolcano truncated by a caldera, the pre-caldera edifice has been shown to consist of nine contiguous late-Pleistocene lava dome clusters, most of which lie east of the present caldera. A large post-caldera lava dome extends into the lake on the SW side and another dome forms a small island in the center of the lake. The caldera is unglaciated, and distal tephras from the caldera-forming eruption have been radiocarbon dated at about 5,800 years before present. Voluminous dacitic pyroclastic-flow deposits surround the caldera and reached Shelikof Strait to the SE.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

Riassunto in inglese

Mount Kaguyak is a stratovolcano located in the northeastern part of the Katmai National Park and Preserve in the U.S. state of Alaska. The 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) wide caldera is filled by a more than 180 m deep crater lake. The surface of the crater lake lies about 550 m below the rim of the caldera. Postcaldera lava domes form a prominent peninsula in the center of the lake. The volcano is 901 metres (2,956 ft) high and is topographically prominent because it rises from lowland areas near sea level in the south of the Big River.

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Storia delle eruzioni

Riepilogo (VEI nel tempo)
Fai clic su una barra per vedere le singole eruzioni
4060 BCE~4039 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?3871 BCE~3850 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 54060 BCE4018 BCE3955 BCE3913 BCE3871 BCE

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 3850 a.C.VEI 5Stima geologica
    BCE 3850 – In corso
    Kaguyak caldera
  2. 4060 a.C. (±150 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 4060 – In corso

Link esterni

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