Earth:Prindle Volcano

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Short description: Cinder cone in Canada

Prindle Volcano is an isolated basaltic cinder cone located in eastern Alaska, United States , in the headwaters of the East Fork of the Fortymile River, approximately 80 kilometers northeast of Tok, Alaska.[1] The cone is fresh-looking and has a base approximately 900 metres (980 yards) wide. It is the northwesternmost expression of the Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province. The cinder cone, and an approximately 11-kilometre (6.8-mile) long lava flow which breached the margin of the cone, erupted in the Pleistocene approximately 176,000 years ago.[2] The lava flow extends to the southeast, then turns southwest and continues in a river valley.[1]

Rocks forming the Prindle Volcano occur within, and penetrated through, the Yukon–Tanana upland which is a large region of mostly Paleozoic-Mesozoic metamorphosed and deformed sedimentary, volcanic, and intrusive rocks that are intruded by younger Cretaceous and Cenozoic granitic rocks.[3] Xenoliths in the volcano's ejecta provide a sample of lower crust material.[4][5]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Wood, Charles A. (1992-11-27) (in en). Volcanoes of North America: United States and Canada. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-43811-7. https://books.google.com/books?id=eyDRib-FJh4C&dq=Prindle+Volcano&pg=PA109. 
  2. "Dating young basalt eruptions by (U-Th)/He on xenolithic zircons" Geology, v. 35 no. 1 p. 17-20, 2006 doi: 10.1130/G22956A.1
  3. "Prindle Volcano - Introduction". Avo.alaska.edu. 2013-09-24. http://www.avo.alaska.edu/volcanoes/volcinfo.php?volcname=Prindle%20Volcano. 
  4. "Granulite and Peridotite Inclusions from Prindle Volcano, Yukon–Tanana Upland, Alaska". Avo.alaska.edu. http://www.avo.alaska.edu/pdfs/P0550B_p115to119.pdf. 
  5. Ghent, Edward D.; Edwards, Benjamin R.; Russell, J.K.; Mortensen, James (2008-03-31). "Granulite facies xenoliths from Prindle volcano, Alaska: Implications for the northern Cordilleran crustal lithosphere". Lithos 101 (3–4): 344–358. doi:10.1016/j.lithos.2007.07.016. 

External links

[ ⚑ ] 63°42′54″N 141°37′44″W / 63.715°N 141.62889°W / 63.715; -141.62889