Mount Hood, Oregon
Mount Hood, Oregon
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Mount Hood (45.4N, 121.7W) is the tallest mountain in Oregon (11,237
feet, 3,426 m) and popular with skiers, hikers, and climbers. It is 45
miles (75 km) east-southeast of Portland, Oregon. Mount Hood is a
stratovolcano made of lava flows, domes, and volcaniclastic deposits.
Most of the volcano is andesite composition. The main cone of Mount Hood
formed about 500,000 years ago. In the last 15,000 years the volcano has
had four eruptive periods. During the most recent
eruptive period, 250-180 years ago, lava domes collapsed
and produced numerous pyroclastic flows and lahars which
buried the southwest flank of the mountain. Crater Rock,
a prominent rocky pinnacle just below the summit, is the
most recent lava dome. Similar eruptions in the future
pose the greatest risk to communities on the flank of the
volcano. Photograph by Paul Doss, Colby College.
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Photograph of Mount Hood by Kyle Jones, August 1989.
View of the south side of Mount Hood. The dashed line outlines the fan of pyroclastic flow deposits and mudflows that formed about 1,500-1,800 years ago. The remnant of a dome that erupted about 200-300 years ago is in the center of Mount Hood's crater
(arrow). From Crandell (1980).
Crater Rock (arrow), the remnant of a dome that erupted about 200-300 years ago, rises 560 feet (170 m) above the crater of Mount Hood. Figure 17 from Crandell (1980).
Additional information about Mount Hood is presented on the
Cascade Volcano Observatory homepage of the U.S. Geological Survey.
More Images of Mt. Hood, Oregon
Sources of Information:
Crandell, D.R., 1980, Recent eruptive history of Mount Hood, Oregon, and potential hazards from future eruptions: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1492, 81 p.
Wood, C.A., and Kienle, J., 1993, Volcanoes of North America: Cambridge University Press, New York, 354 p.
The Danger of Collapsing Lava Domes: Lessons for Mount
Hood, Oregon by Steven Brantley and William Scott,
Earthquakes & Volcanoes, 1993, v. 24, no. 6, p. 244-269.