Dana


Facts


  • Official Name: Mount Dana
  • Seismically Monitored: No
  • Color Code: UNASSIGNED
  • Alert Level: UNASSIGNED
  • Elevation: 1354m (4442ft)
  • Latitude: 55.64205
  • Longitude: -161.21551
  • Smithsonian VNum: 312050
  • Pronunciation:
  • Nearby Towns:
    • Nelson Lagoon 25 mi (40 km) NE
    • Sand Point 35 mi (56 km) SE
    • Unga 42 mi (68 km) SE
    • Belkofski 49 mi (80 km) SW
    • King Cove 59 mi (95 km) SW

    Distance from Anchorage: 561 mi (902 km)

Description

From Wood and Kienle (1990) [1] : "Mount Dana is a small calc-alkaline volcanic center consisting largely of volcaniclastic debris surrounding a central dome or domes, reminiscent of Augustine volcano. The volcano rests on relatively undeformed Jurassic and Cretaceous marine sandstone and shale. Mesozoic sedimentary rocks, dipping steeply southwest, form the southwest crater rim and are exposed in the canyon at the crater outlet. Remnants of a high-silica andesite dome are exposed on the west crater rim and in a small mound on the east side of Knutson Lake. A block-and-ash flow erupted 3,840 yBP fills valleys south and west of the crater. A 200-m-wide tufa mound and several cold springs occur at elevations of 490 to 520 m on the southwest flank."

Name Origin

"Mount Dana" is a local name for this volcano, reported by the U.S. Geological Survey in 1929 (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.

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