Bayuda Volcanic Field Volcano
Updated: Apr 19, 2024 20:05 GMT -
Cinder cones 670? m / 2,198 ft
Sudan, 18.33°N / 32.75°E
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
Sudan, 18.33°N / 32.75°E
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
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Bayuda Volcanic Field volcano eruptions: 850 AD ± 50 years
Latest nearby earthquakes
Time | Mag. / Depth | Distance / Location |
Background
The Bayuda volcanic field is located in the Bayuda Desert of NE Sudan, south of the major Abu Hamed bend of the Nile River about 300 km north of capital city of Khartoum. More than 90 eruptive centers along a WNW-ESE line were constructed over Precambrian and Paleozoic granitic rocks near the center of the Bayuda Desert. Most vents of the Bayuda field are cinder cones that produced lava flows which breached the cones. About 10% of vents in the field are explosion craters, the largest of which, named Hosh ed Dalam, is 1.3 km wide and up to 500 m deep. The youngest basalts of the Bayuda volcanic field appear to post-date the last period of moist climate in Sudan, which ended as recently as about 5000 years ago. One of the least eroded lava flows at Bayuda was dated at about 1100 years ago.---
Smithsonian / GVP volcano information