Location: 56.2N, 159.4W
Elevation: 8,223 feet (2,507 m)
Last update: April 27, 2004
Veniaminof is a large stratovolcano
that suffered a huge caldera-forming
eruption about 3,700 years ago. The caldera is almost 6 miles (10 km) across
and filled with ice and snow. All the recent eruptions have taken place from
a cinder cone that pokes up
through the ice in the caldera. Both the 1983-84 and June 1993-present eruption
have consisted of fountaining at this cinder cone. Additionally, lava
flows flow down the sides of the cone and onto the ice surface where they
then melt their way down through to the bottom of the caldera and then a lake
forms. This photo s hows active lava flows on January 23, 1984. Flows from November
1983 are covered with snow. Photo courtesy of U.S. Geological Survey.
There are very few people who live nearby so the danger to humans is pretty small. One of the things they worry about is called a jokulhlaup. This is an unpronounceable Icelandic word. A jokulhlaup happens when an eruption occurs under a thick ice sheet. The eruption will often melt the bottom of the glacier. If the eruption keeps on long enough pretty soon the glacier will float up on its own melted water (ice floats). As soon as this happens all that melted water can escape out from under the glacier and you get a big flood. This happens pretty often in Iceland, and it is a possibility at Veniaminof.
Eruption of Veniaminof on January 23, 1984. From front cover of USGS in Alaska:
Accomplishments during 1983.
Click here to see summaries of the 1993 and 1994 eruptions at Veniaminof.
Alaska Volcano Observatory bimonthly reports.
Byers, F.M., 1955, Geology of Umnak and Bogoslof Islands Aleutian Islands Alaska: U.S. Geology
Miller, T.P., and Smith, R.L., 1987, Late Quaternary caldera-forming eruptions in the eastern Aleutian arc, Alaska: Geology, v. 15, p. 434-438.
Simkin, T., and Siebert, L., 1994, Volcanoes of the World: Geoscience Press, Tucson, Arizona, 349 p.
Wood, C.A., and Kienle, J., 1993, Volcanoes of North America: Cambridge University Press, New York, 354 p.
Yount, M.E., Miller, T.P., Emanuel, R.P., and Wilson, F.H., 1985, Eruption in an ice-filled caldera, Mount Veniaminof, Alaska Peninsula, in Bartsch-Winkler, S., and Reed, K.M. (eds.), USGS in Alaska: Accomplishments during 1983: U.S. Geological Circular 9 45, p. 58-60.
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