North Vate Volcano
Updated: 24 abr. 2024 19:38 GMT -
Stratovolcanoes 594 m / 1,949 ft
Vanuatu, -17.47°S / 168.35°E
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
Vanuatu, -17.47°S / 168.35°E
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
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Erupciones del volcán North Vate: unknown, no recent eruptions
Latest nearby earthquakes
Fecha / Hora | Revista / Prof. | Distancia / Ubicación |
Background
The islands of Nguna, Pele, and Emau, north of Vate Island (also known as Efaté), have been variously mapped as Pleistocene and Pleistocene to Holocene. Late-Pleistocene to Holocene eruptions constructed composite basaltic cones with well-preserved craters. Largely submarine calderas north of Vate Island of varying sizes have been inferred, ranging from a large caldera whose southern rim is defined by the islands of Nguna, Pele, and Emao to a smaller caldera, but their submarine morphology is difficult to define. Pumiceous deposits of the Efaté Pumice Formation cover much of Vate (Efaté) Island and record a major trachydacitic explosive eruption about 1 million years ago that originated from a submarine vent somewhere north of the island.---
Smithsonian / GVP volcano information