Jan Mayen Volcano
Updated: 10 maggio 2024 01:45 GMT -
Stratovolcano 2277 m / 7,470 ft
Jan Mayen Island, Norway, 71.08°N / -8.17°W
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
Jan Mayen Island, Norway, 71.08°N / -8.17°W
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
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Eruzioni del vulcano Jan Mayen: 1985
Latest nearby earthquakes
Data / ora | Mag. / Prof. | Distanza / Ubicazione | |||
2 mag 10:27 (Longyearbyen) | 1.3 1.6 km | 25 km a ovest | Svalbard & Jan Mayen | Info | |
2 mag 08:38 (Longyearbyen) | 1.2 24 km | 14 km a ovest | Svalbard & Jan Mayen | Info | |
lunedì, 29 aprile 2024 GMT (2 sismi) | |||||
29 apr 14:57 (Longyearbyen) | 0.8 14 km | Svalbard & Jan Mayen | Info | ||
29 apr 14:00 (GMT +2) | 1.5 3.1 km | 29 km a nord ovest | Svalbard & Jan Mayen | Info | |
sabato, 27 aprile 2024 GMT (1 sismo) | |||||
27 apr 10:26 (Longyearbyen) | 1.1 20 km | 11 km a nord ovest | Info |
Background
Remote Jan Mayen Island, located in the Norwegian Sea along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge about 650 km NE of Iceland, consists of two volcanic complexes separated by a narrow isthmus. The large Beerenberg basaltic stratovolcano (Nord-Jan) forms the NE end of the 40-km-long island, which is ringed by high cliffs. Beerenberg is a large 2277-m-high glacier-covered stratovolcano with a 1-km-wide summit crater and numerous cinder cones that were erupted along flank fissures. It is composed primarily of basaltic lava flows with minor amounts of tephra. Historical eruptions at Beerenberg date back to the 18th century. The Sor-Jan group of pyroclastic cones and lava domes occupies the SW tip of Jan Mayen. The Holocene Sor-Jan cinder cones, tephra rings, and trachytic lava domes were erupted from short fissures with a NE-SW trend.---
Smithsonian / GVP volcano information