Black Peak
Facts
- Official Name: Black Peak
- Seismically Monitored: No
- Color Code: UNASSIGNED
- Alert Level: UNASSIGNED
- Elevation: 1032m (3385ft)
- Latitude: 56.5512
- Longitude: -158.787
- Smithsonian VNum: 312080
- Pronunciation:
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Nearby Towns:
- Chignik Lagoon 19 mi (31 km) SE
- Chignik Lake 20 mi (33 km) SE
- Chignik 23 mi (37 km) SE
- Port Heiden 28 mi (45 km) NE
- Perryville 46 mi (74 km) SW
Distance from Anchorage: 452 mi (727 km)
Description
From Wood and Kienle (1990) [1] : "Black Peak is a deeply eroded, highly altered stratovolcano/dome complex with a small caldera at its eastern edge. The caldera is ice-free and contains two small lakes; most of the interior of the caldera is occupied by a complex of nested dacitic domes. The volcano rests on a north-dipping basement of Pliocene volcanogenic non-marine sedimentary rocks."The flows, domes, and volcaniclastic rocks that make up the pre-caldera cone range in composition from andesite to dacite. Dacitic ash-flow tuffs and coarse block-and-ash flows fill the Bluff and Ash Creek valleys to as much as 100 m on the north and west sides of the volcano. The pyroclastic flows that deposited these tuffs had limited distribution and appear to have been relatively sluggish; they also appear to have had a large air-fall component, judging from the crude stratification in the ash-flow tuff. In spite of the caldera's small diameter, the widespread climactic air fall and the thickness of the ash-flow tuffs suggest a bulk eruption volume of >10 cubic km."
Name Origin
The name "Black Peak" is a translation of the Russian name "So[pka] Chornaia," published by Captain Tebenkov in 1852 (Orth, 1971).
References Cited
[1] Volcanoes of North America: United States and Canada, 1990
Wood, C. A., and Kienle, Juergen, (eds.), 1990, Volcanoes of North America: United States and Canada: New York, Cambridge University Press, 354 p.Loading Past Activity...
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Before an eruption
Ashfall & Preparedness Information
- Ashfall impacts & preparedness (US Geological Survey)
- Volcanic health hazards & impacts (International Volcanic Health Hazards Network)
- Ash Alert! Pamphlet (AK Division of Homeland Security & Emergency Management)
- Volcanic Ashfall (AK Department of Environmental Conservation, Division of Air Quality)