Dutton Volcano
Updated: May 2, 2024 21:16 GMT -
Stratovolcano 1506 m / 4,941 ft
United States, Alaska Peninsula, 55.17°N / -162.27°W
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
United States, Alaska Peninsula, 55.17°N / -162.27°W
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
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Dutton volcano eruptions: unknown, no recent eruptions
Latest nearby earthquakes
Time | Mag. / Depth | Distance / Location | |||
Apr 29, 10:40 am (Anchorage) | 1.0 0.4 km | 5 km ESE of King Cove, Alaska | Info | ||
Apr 29, 10:00 am (Anchorage) | 1.3 3.4 km | 24 km (15 mi) to the S | 13 km SSE of King Cove, Alaska | Info | |
Apr 29, 05:34 am (Anchorage) | 1.1 1.8 km | 13 km (8.2 mi) to the S | 5 km ESE of King Cove, Alaska | Info | |
Apr 28, 09:18 pm (Anchorage) | 0.8 0.2 km | 4 km ESE of King Cove, Alaska | Info | ||
Apr 28, 08:02 pm (Anchorage) | 0.5 0.1 km | 5 km ESE of King Cove, Alaska | Info | ||
Apr 28, 07:17 pm (Anchorage) | 0.5 2.7 km | 4 km ESE of King Cove, Alaska | Info |
Background
The Mount Dutton volcanic center east of Cold Bay near the tip of the Alaska Peninsula consists of a glacier-covered, 1506-m-high central lava dome complex. Early andesitic lava flows and late-stage dacitic lava domes have been partially removed by one or more Holocene edifice collapses about 5100-6800 years ago. This created debris avalanches that traveled to the west and to the south, reaching Belkofski Bay. The important regional fishing center of King Cove lies less than 15 km from the volcano, and the village's airstrip is built on top of the southern avalanche deposit. A steep-sided complex of lava domes forms the summit of the volcano, and young block-and-ash flow deposits extend to the east. Two small unglaciated lava domes on the NE flank 3.5 km from the summit are also of Holocene age. Major earthquake swarms near the volcano were recorded in 1984-85 and 1988.---
Smithsonian / GVP volcano information