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Clear Lake Volcanic Field

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Parent range
  
North Coast Ranges

Elevation
  
1,440 m

Mountain range
  
California Coast Ranges

Topo map
  
USGS Kelseyville

Last eruption
  
Holocene

Clear Lake Volcanic Field httpswwwwiredcomimagesblogswiredscience20

Location
  
Lake County, California, United States

Age of rock
  
less than 2.1 million years

Mountain type
  
lava domes, cinder cones, maars within volcanic field

Similar
  
Mount Konocti, Coso Volcanic Field, Salton Buttes, Brushy Butte, Cobb Mountain

The Clear Lake Volcanic Field is a volcanic field beside Clear Lake in California's northern Coast Ranges. The site of late-Pliocene to early Holocene activity, the volcanic field consists of lava domes, cinder cones, and maars with eruptive products varying from basalt to rhyolite. Cobb Mountain and Mount Konocti are the two highest peaks in the volcanic field, at 4,724 feet (1,440 m) and 4,285 feet (1,306 m) respectively.

Map of Clear Lake Volcanic Field, California 95451, USA

The field's magma chamber also powers a geothermal field called The Geysers, which hosts the largest complex of geothermal power plants in the world. These can generate approximately 2000 megawatts, enough to power two cities the size of San Francisco.

The Clear Lake volcanics are thought to have been the heat source for the hot springs and hydrothermal activity that formed the mercury ores at the Sulphur Bank Mine, and the gold ore at the McLaughlin Mine.

References

Clear Lake Volcanic Field Wikipedia


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