Kone Volcano
Updated: Apr 25, 2024 09:27 GMT -
Calderas 1619 m / 5,312 ft
Ethiopia, 8.8°N / 39.69°E
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
Ethiopia, 8.8°N / 39.69°E
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
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Kone volcano eruptions: 1820 ± 10 years
Latest nearby earthquakes
Time | Mag. / Depth | Distance / Location |
Background
The Kone volcanic complex, also known as Gariboldi, is composed of a series of silicic calderas and young basaltic cinder cones and lava flows about 30 km SW of Fentale volcano. As many as eight silicic calderas are accompanied by ignimbrite outflow sheets. Gariboldi, the youngest caldera, is an elliptical 5 x 7.5 km wide caldera trending E-W and oriented perpendicular to the Main Ethiopian Rift. The rim of the caldera rises about 100 m above the caldera floor; the eastern rim overlaps with a smaller elliptical caldera. Roughly N-S-trending regional fissures cut across the caldera and its flanks. The youngest basalts were erupted during the first half of the 19th century from vents along a hinge line between the smaller eastern caldera and the larger western one.---
Smithsonian / GVP volcano information
Kone Volcano Photos
The icon of Maria and Jesus (Photo: Tom Pfeiffer)
Lots of plants and colourful ceramics on the balconies in the town of Taormina. (Photo: Ingrid Smet)
The narrow streets in between centuries old multistory buildings are full of activity, also above the ground on the countless balconies. (Photo: Ingrid Smet)
Saying goodbye to Naples'busy historic streets with balconies and laundry before we set of to the Eolian islands. (Photo: Ingrid Smet)