Kontakt | RSS | EN | DE | EL | ES | FR | IT | RU

Sarychev Peak Volcano

Updated: 25. Apr. 2024 00:53 GMT -
stratovolcano 1496 m (4,908 ft)
Zentralkurilen (Kurilen), 48.09°N / 153.2°E
Aktueller Status: normal / ruhend (1 von 5)
Last update: 14 Dez 2021

Sarychev volcano is one of the most active volcanoes in the Kuril Island chain streching between Kamchatka and Japan. Large explosive eruptions occured between 11-19 June 2009, sending huge ash coulds to altitudes of up to 14 km, and forcing many flights with routes accross the northern Pacific to be cancelled or diverted.

[smaller] [larger]
Typische Aktivität: Explosive.
Ausbrüche des Sarychev Peak: 2019 (?), 2010 (?), 2009 (12 June, subplinian eruption), 1989, 1986, 1976, 1965, 1960, 1954, 1946, 1932?, 1930, 1928, 1927, 1923, 1878, 1805, 1760

Letzte Erdbeben in der Nähe

No recent earthquakes
UhrzeitMag. / TiefeEntfernung / Ort

Beschreibung

Sarychev Peak, one of the most active volcanoes of the Kuril Islands, occupies the NW end of Matua Island in the central Kuriles. The andesitic central cone was constructed within a 3-3.5 km wide caldera, whose rim is exposed only on the SW side. A dramatic 250-m-wide, very steep-walled crater with a jagged rim caps the volcano. The substantially higher SE rim forms the 1496 m high point of the island. Fresh-looking lava flows descend all sides of Sarychev Peak and often form capes along the coast. Much of the lower-angle outer flanks of the volcano are overlain by pyroclastic-flow deposits. Eruptions have been recorded since the 1760's and include both quiet lava effusion and violent explosions.
The largest historical eruption of Sarychev Peak began on June, 11, 2009 and produced ash plumes rising to up to 14 kms and pyroclastic flows that reached the sea. The ash plumes drifting westwards at altitudes typical for commercial airplanes forced many flights with routes accross the northern Pacific to be cancelled or diverted.

Ausbrüche des Vulkans Sarychev Peak



2009 subplinian eruption
Sarychev volcano has a spectacular eruption on 12-15 June 2009. A powerful explosion produced an sub-plinian eruption column 12-18 km tall which injected large amounts of ash into the stratosphere. The plume extended 200 km to the south-west and 105 km to the south-east. The eruption was mainly observed through satellites, because Sarychev is not monitored with ground-based instruments. The eruption intensified on 14 June, when the column reached 40,000 ft (13 km), and on 15 June, when it peaked at 54,000 ft (18 km) altitude.

1989 eruption
A new eruption began at Sarychev volcano on 14 January 1989. The eruption was preceded by a magnitude 6.2 earthquake near nearby Simushir Island.

1986 eruption
During an overflight on 2 November 1986, a lava flow was observed extending 150 m south of the crater.

1976 eruption
Ash emissions were observed from Sarychev Peak in September 1976.

1960 eruption
A series of explosions destroyed the old lava dome. Ash plumes extended 300 km to the NNE. At the end of the eruption, lava flows occurred.

1954 eruption
Small ash eruptions occurred from Sarychev volcano.

1946 eruption
A large eruption occurred in 1946. Big bombs were ejected as far as 7 km from the crater and the height of the ash emissions reached more than 6 km.

1930 eruption
The eruption in 1930 was a large explosive event lasting 13 hours.

1928 eruption
The eruption of Sarychev in 1928 was explosive.

1878-1879 eruption
During the eruption in 1878-79, a lava flow was erupted.

1760 eruption
The eruption in 1760 was one of the largest of Sarychev Peak in historic times.

Latest satellite images

SarychevPeak satellite image sat1SarychevPeak satellite image sat2
Mi, 27. Okt 2021, 09:08

Sarychev volcano (Kurile Islands, Russia): thermal hot spot and gas plume

Hot spot and plume at Sarychev Peak volcano during the past days (image: NASA FIRMS)
Recent satellite imagery shows a hot spot and gas plume from the volcano's summit crater. This suggests that there has been at least weak activity recently. ... Read all
Mi, 11. Aug 2021, 06:00

Sarychev Peak volcano (Matua Island, Russia) - Smithsonian / USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report for 11 August-17 August 2021 (New Activity / Unrest)

SVERT reported that an emission of sulfur dioxide from Sarychev Peak was identified in satellite data on 15 August. ... Read all
This once-in-a-lifetime spectacular image was shot from the International Space Station on June 12, 2009 and shows an early stage of one of the larger eruptions at Sarychev Volcano.
This once-in-a-lifetime spectacular image was shot from the International Space Station on June 12, 2009 and shows an early stage of one of the larger eruptions at Sarychev Volcano.
The eruption plume is composed of  brown ash and white steam. The vigorously rising plume gives the steam a bubble-like appearance; the surrounding atmosphere has been shoved up by the shock wave of the eruption. The smooth white cloud on top may be water condensation that resulted from rapid rising and cooling of the air mass above the ash column.
Caption credit: M. Justin Wilkinson, NASA-JSC.
Image credit: Expedition 20 crew, NASA's Earth Observatory
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=38985 Eruption of Sarychev from space photo: Nasa's Earth Observatory with detailed interpretation of the above picture.

Auf dieser Seite:

App herunterladen
Volcanoes & Earthquakes - new app for Android
Android | iOS-Version

Mehr auf VolcanoDiscovery

Warum gibt es Werbung auf dieser Seite?

Unterstützen Sie unsere Arbeit!

Diese Webseite und die dazugehörigen Apps und Tools instandzuhalten und kostenlos Nachrichten zu Vulkanen, Erdbeben und anderen Themen bereitzustellen, verschlingt enorm viel Zeit und auch Geld.
Wenn Sie die Infos mögen und uns in der Arbeit dazu unterstützen wollen, würden wir uns über eine Spende (über PayPal oder mit Kreditkarte) sehr freuen.
Online Zahlung (Kreditkarte)
Damit können wir Ihnen auch in Zukunft neue Features entwickeln und Bestehende laufend verbessern.Vielen Dank!
Sources: VolcanoDiscovery / VolcanoAdventures and other sources as noted.
Use of material: Most text and images on our websites are owned by us. Re-use is generally not permitted without authorization. Contact us for licensing rights.
Volcanoes & Earthquakes
VolcanoDiscovery Home
Vulkane | Erdbeben | Fotos | News | App
Adventure & Study Travel
Reisen zu Vulkanen und Vulkangebieten: Wanderreisen, Studienreisen, Fotoreisen
Tours & Dates | FAQ | About us
Get our newsletter!
Company info
Kontakt | Impressum | AGB
Follow us
Follow us on facebook Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Twitter Visit our Youtube channel
EN | DE | EL | ES | FR | IT | RU
VolcanoDiscovery GmbH, Germany, Reg. nr.: HRB 103744, EU Tax Id: DE 297 465 123 owned and created by
Dr. Tom Pfeiffer, volcanologist, volcano photographer, tour organizer member of
IAVCEI
IAVCEI
Vulkanologische Gesellschaft
Volcanological Society
Ecotourism Greece
Ecotourism Greece
RUV insurance
Insured by R+V
VolcanoDiscovery © 2004- All Rights Reserved | Datenschutz - Cookie Einstellungen