Lava Flows
Lava Flows
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Hazards Summary for Lassen Volcanic Center
Several hazards will likely accompany a future eruption of Lassen volcano.
Lava Flows at Lassen Volcanic Center
Basaltic lava flows and small, associated, local ash falls, are the most common volcanic activity at Lassen volcanic center.
Eruption History of the Lassen Volcanic Center and Surrounding Region
Over the last 3 million years, regional volcanism in the Lassen segment of the Cascade arc constructed a broad platform of volcanic rocks. In periods of about 50,000 - 200,000 years, concentrated volcanism occurred in localized areas. These "volcanic centers" are defined as large, long-lived edifices erupting the full range of lava compositions from basalt to rhyolite.
Formation of Volcanic Centers within the Southernmost Cascade Range
Volcanic centers within the southernmost Cascade Range are regions of large, long-lived, volcanic activity that erupt the full range of magma types (from low- silica basalt to high-silica rhyolite). They form when large bodies of basalt magma, which is very close to the composition of the mantle, rise through and collect in the crust.
The 1914-1917 Eruption of Lassen Peak
On May 22, 1915, an explosive eruption at Lassen Peak, California, the southernmost active volcano in the Cascade Range, devastated nearby areas and rained volcanic ash as far away as 300 km (about 200 mi) to the east. This explosion was the most powerful in a 1914-17 series of eruptions that were the last to occur in the Cascades before the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens.
Cinder Cone
Cinder Cone, a 215 m (700 ft) tall volcanic cone located in the northern part of Lassen Volcanic National Park, is the youngest mafic volcano in the Lassen region and the second youngest eruption in the Twin Lakes sequence.
Chaos Crags and Chaos Jumbles
Chaos Crags, located northwest of Lassen Peak, erupted 1,100 years ago and is the youngest unit of the Eagle Peak sequence.