Mount Cayley volcanic field
Cayley Volcanic Field
火山原 · Canada · 2375m

- タイプ
- 火山原
- 国
- Canada
- 地域
- North America Volcanic Regions / Garibaldi Volcanic Arc
- 標高
- 2375m
- 座標
- 50.120, -123.280
- 最終噴火
- 不明
- テクトニクス環境
- Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
- 火山地形
- Cluster
- 主要岩石
- Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
地質学的概要
The Cayley volcanic field is a deeply dissected basaltic andesite to rhyodacitic complex that covers a broad area between the Cheakamus and Squamish river valleys in the central Garibaldi volcanic belt. Mount Cayley itself was formed during at least three periods of activity primarily during the Pliocene and Pleistocene, but activity at satellitic dominantly subglacial vents along a N-S line both north and south of Mount Cayley continued in the late Pleistocene and Holocene. Vents in the Cheakamus Valley formed a 22-km-long lava flow sequence prior to 50,000 years before present that was topped by esker-like flows of late Pleistocene age. The youngest lava flows from Pali Dome West and from the subglacial Slag Hill volcano north of Mount Cayley were not impounded by ice at low elevations, implying that they erupted after the end of the Fraser Glaciation (less than 10,000 years ago). Large volcanic landslides have occurred at heavily eroded Mount Cayley during the Holocene. At least five hot springs are present in valleys adjacent to the volcano, and shallow earthquakes have occurred in the vicinity.
Wikipedia の要約
英語版の要約The Mount Cayley volcanic field (MCVF) is a remote volcanic zone on the South Coast of British Columbia, Canada, stretching 31 kilometres from the Pemberton Icefield to the Squamish River. It forms a segment of the Garibaldi Volcanic Belt, the Canadian portion of the Cascade Volcanic Arc, which extends from Northern California to southwestern British Columbia. Most of the MCVF volcanoes were formed during periods of volcanism under sheets of glacial ice throughout the last glacial period. These subglacial eruptions formed steep, flat-topped volcanoes and subglacial lava domes, most of which have been entirely exposed by deglaciation. However, at least two volcanoes predate the last glacial period and both are highly eroded. The field gets its name from Mount Cayley, a volcanic peak located at the southern end of the Powder Mountain Icefield. This icefield covers much of the central portion of the volcanic field and is one of the several glacial fields in the Pacific Ranges of the Coast Mountains.
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