Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Mount Natib

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Country
  
Philippines

Mountain type
  
Stratovolcano-Caldera

Mountain range
  
Zambales Mountains

Parent range
  
Zambales Mountains

Region
  
Central Luzon

Elevation
  
1,253 m

Province
  
Bataan

Mount Natib 1bpblogspotcomTXo9hGwVNn4UgEQOBA00YIAAAAAAA

Listing
  
Potentially active volcano

Location
  
Bataan Peninsula, Luzon

Age of rock
  
Pliocene to Pleistocene

Similar
  
Mount Mariveles, Mount Arayat, Mount Samat, Mount Amorong, Mount Tapulao

Hike to kairukan falls


Mount Natib /nɑːˈtb/ is a dormant volcano and caldera complex in the province of Bataan on western Luzon Island of the Philippines. The volcano complex occupies the northern portion of the Bataan Peninsula. The mountain and adjacent surrounding is a protected area first declared as the Bataan National Park in 1945.

Contents

Map of Mount Natib, Morong, Bataan, Philippines

Physical featuresEdit

Mount Natib is a stratovolcano type of volcano topped by a 6-by-7-kilometre (3.7 by 4.3 mi) acorn-shaped Natib Caldera that is open to the northwest. East of its caldera is the smaller 2-kilometre (1.2 mi) wide Pasukulan Caldera. The highest peak of Mount Natib has an elevation of 1,253 metres (4,111 ft) asl and is at the point of convergence of the two calderas. The caldera complex has an overall base diameter of 26 kilometres (16 mi).

Volcanic activityEdit

There are no historical eruptions within the Natib caldera complex. Studies in 1991 (Panum and Rayem) indicate that the last eruptive activity was probably Holocene to upper Pleistocene. An earlier study in 1971 (Ebasco Services) dated the eruptive products between 69,000 +/- 27,000 years old. A recent study by Dr. Kevin Rodolfo of the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago, had Mount Natib's latest eruption between 11,000 and 18,000 years ago after studying a prehistoric pyroclastic flow from the volcano that entered Subic Bay in Zambales province. Current activity on Natib is through five thermal areas. The hot springs in the Natib caldera are Asin, Mamot, Tigulangin, Uyong and Paipit springs. The hot springs have temperatures ranging from 30-56 °C, with low flows, and a neutral to slightly alkaline water discharge.

The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) lists Mount Natib as a potentially active volcano.

GeologyEdit

The rocks found on Natib are predominantly biotite, hornblende, andesite, trending to dacite flows and dacitic tuffs, which are similar to Mount Mariveles, the southern half of the Bataan Peninsula.

Natib is part of the Western Bataan Lineament volcanic belt which includes the active Mount Pinatubo.

References

Mount Natib Wikipedia