Английская Википедия:Fumarole Butte

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Файл:FumaroleButte USGS.jpg
Oblique aerial view of Fumarole Butte, with Oquirrh Mountains in the background, 1978
Файл:Fumarole Butte satellite.png
Satellite photograph of Fumarole Butte, November 2010
Файл:Fumarole Butte volcanic complex 1978 AR1VERD00020029.jpg
Air photo from 1978

Fumarole Butte is a shield volcano in central Juab County, Utah, United States.[1] Built during the Quaternary period, it is composed of basaltic andesite. It stands Шаблон:Convert in height and has a diameter of Шаблон:Convert. Under the volcano lies Crater Bench, the result of an eruption of basaltic andesite. To the east of the volcano are a series of hot springs, known as Baker Hot Springs.[2]

Background

Fumarole Butte is located in the area once dominated by Lake Bonneville, a massive body of water nearly Шаблон:Convert in area. The lake was created more than 800,000 years ago by extensive precipitation and glacier melting, and has dried up and re-emerged at least 28 times since. The cycles have been matched almost exactly to periods of glaciation by drilling and stratigraphic studies.[3]

Description

Fumarole Butte lies north of the Sevier Desert. It is located in the scoria-rich valley of a basaltic lava field,[4] on top of Tertiary-aged structures of rhyolitic lava. Made of red and gray material, its composition ranges from dark basalt to reddish scoria.[4]

Fumarole Butte formed during the Jaramillo normal event, approximately one million years ago. It is a shield volcano with a volcanic neck protruding from the center. On the edges of the volcano, lacustrine deposits can be found where the volcano was once covered by Lake Bonneville.[2]

Crater Bench Formation

Eruptions from Fumarole Butte created the basaltic Crater Bench Formation, which lies beneath the neck. It is around 900,000 years of age, dated to the Pleistocene. The area is divided by faults[5] and ranges in thickness from Шаблон:Convert to Шаблон:Convert. The primary component of the lava is aphyric basaltic andesite in which tiny crystalline structures are visible.[6]

References

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External links

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