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Mount Akutan

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Topo map
  
USGS Unimak A-6 NW

Volcanic arc/belt
  
Aleutian Arc

Elevation
  
1,303 m

Age of rock
  
Pleistocene

Mountain type
  
Stratovolcano

Last eruption
  
1992

Mountain range
  
Aleutian Range

Parent range
  
Aleutian Range

Mount Akutan httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Mount Amukta, Korovin Volcano, Makushin Volcano, Mount Kanaga, Amak Volcano

Mount Akutan, officially Akutan Peak, is a stratovolcano in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska. Akutan Peak, at 4,275 feet (1,303 m), is the highest point on the caldera of the Akutan stratovolcano. Akutan contains a 2 km-wide caldera formed during a major explosive eruption about 1600 years ago. Recent eruptive activity has originated from a large cinder cone on the NE part of the caldera. It has been the source of frequent explosive eruptions with occasional lava effusion that blankets the caldera floor. A lava flow in 1978 traveled through a narrow breach in the north caldera rim to within 2 km of the coast. A small lake occupies part of the caldera floor. Two volcanic centers are located on the NW flank: Lava Peak is of Pleistocene age; and, a cinder cone lower on the flank which produced a lava flow in 1852 that extended the shoreline of the island and forms Lava Point. An older, mostly buried caldera seems to have formed in Pleistocene or Holocene time, while the current caldera formed in a VEI-5 eruption c. 340 AD. AVO has recorded 33 confirmed eruptions at Akutan, making it the volcano with the most eruptions in Alaska.

Map of Akutan Peak, Alaska, USA

The volcano erupted most recently in 1992, but there is still fumarolic activity at the base of Lava Point and there are hot springs North-East of the caldera. In March 1996, an earthquake swarm was followed by deformation of the volcanic edifice, including a lowering of the eastern side and a rise of the western side of the volcano.

References

Mount Akutan Wikipedia