Fichier:Dacite (upper Holocene, 14 May 1915; Hot Rock, Devastated Area, Lassen Volcano National Park, California, USA).jpg

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Description

Description
English: This is lava from Mt. Lassen (Lassen Peak), a prominent volcano and the key scenery in Lassen Volcanic National Park. Lassen Volcano is part of the Cascade Range, a north-south linear chain of active and potentially active volcanoes in America's Pacific Northwest. It extends from northern California to Oregon, Washington State, and into British Columbia, Canada. The Cascade Range formed as a result of tectonic subduction - the offshore Juan de Fuca Plate is diving below the North American Plate. The diving plate causes melting in the mantle. The melt rises and emerges at the surface at volcanic centers. Famous Cascade Range volcanoes include Mt. St. Helens, which had a large eruption in May 1980, Mt. Rainier near Seattle, Mt. Hood, which is the highest peak in Oregon, and Mt. Mazama, which destroyed itself 7,700 years ago in an enormous eruption that produced the modern-day Crater Lake Caldera (also a national park).

Mt. Lassen is a large volcanic dome that developed by lava extruding along the northeastern flanks of a former Cascade Range feature called Brokeoff Volcano (also known as Tehama Volcano). Brokeoff Volcano is an andesitic-dacitic subduction zone stratovolcano (composite volcano). Stratovolcanoes usually have violent, explosive ash eruptions. They tend to erupt igneous materials of intermediate chemistry (between felsic and mafic). Brokeoff Volcano was active from about 4 million years ago, during the Pliocene, to about 400,000 years ago. Only the caldera exists today. Calderas are large holes or depressions left behind after a volcano destroys itself or collapses. The Brokeoff Caldera is an erosional and slow-collapse caldera that formed before about 350,000 years ago.

The Mt. Lassen volcanic dome first started forming in the Late Pleistocene, at about 29 ka. It is principally composed of dacite lava, an extrusive igneous rock that is usually porphyritic-textured. Dacite is between andesite and rhyolite in silica content. Activity through time has ranged from dacite lava extrusion to explosive ash eruptions. Mt. Lassen last experienced eruptive activity in the early 1900s (1914 to 1921).

The lava boulder shown here is in a volcanic debris flow deposit from 19 and 22 May 1915, when Mt. Lassen last had a significant eruption. The deposit consists of fine sediments, cobbles, and boulders, some of which are quite large. Clasts in the flow deposit include pinkish-reddish porphyritic dacite and gray porphyritic dacite, both of which formed at 27 ka during the Late Pleistocene, early in Mt. Lassen's history. Another clast type in the deposit is black porphyritic dacite that formed on 14 May 1915.

This particular boulder is called "Hot Rock". From park signage: "The rock before you, shaded by these maturing trees, is the same rock labeled by B.F. Loomis [when he examined the] newly formed Devastated Area. The several-ton rock was hot to touch when Loomis photographed it three days after it was ejected from the crater of Lassen Peak as a new-glowing lava rock. Benjamin Franklin Loomis [was a] businessman, amateur photographer, and author. [He] began photo-chronicling Lassen Peak's eruptions in 1914. His photographs brought national attention to the volcano and helped to bring about the establishment of Lassen Volcanic National Park."

From B.F. Loomis' 1926 publication, Pictorial History of the Lassen Volcano: "Many large rocks, some of them hot, were thrown from the crater, or torn off the lip of the crater on the west side, and carried down the creek by the raging torrents."

Locality: Hot Rock, Devastated Area, Lassen Volcano National Park, northeastern California, USA
Date
Source https://www.flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/23723893828/
Auteur James St. John

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Cette image a été originellement postée sur Flickr par James St. John à l'adresse https://flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/23723893828. Elle a été passée en revue le 20 octobre 2020 par le robot FlickreviewR 2, qui a confirmé qu'elle se trouvait sous licence cc-by-2.0.

20 octobre 2020

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