Griggs

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Facts


  • Official Name: Mount Griggs
  • Seismically Monitored: Yes
  • Color Code: GREEN
  • Alert Level: NORMAL
  • Elevation: 2317m (7601ft)
  • Latitude: 58.3572
  • Longitude: -155.1037
  • Smithsonian VNum: 312190
  • Pronunciation:
  • Nearby Towns:
    • Karluk 59 mi (96 km) SE
    • King Salmon 61 mi (98 km) NW
    • Kanatak 64 mi (104 km) SW
    • Larsen Bay 70 mi (113 km) SE
    • Igiugig 73 mi (117 km) NW

    Distance from Anchorage: 268 mi (431 km)

Description

From Wood and Kienle (1990) [1] : "A spectacular, little-dissected cone, Mount Griggs towers 1,700 m above the north margin of the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, its summit only 10 km north of Novarupta. Uniquely among the stratovolcanoes of the Katmai district, it lies 10 km behind (northwest of) the remarkably linear (N66E-trending) volcanic front defined by Martin, Mageik, Trident, Katmai, and Snowy Mountain centers.
"Griggs's truncated summit is an expression of 3 concentric craters, the outermost of which is 1.5 km wide, breached to the southwest, and filled by a semi-annulus of ice wrapped around a young central cone containing the nested inner craters. The main outer crater probably originated by early Holocene collapse, and formation of a 1-cubic km-scale debris avalanche, remnants of which survive on the lower west-southwest flank and across the valley on Broken Mountain. Much of the amphitheater was subsequently filled by the nested inner cone. Outer slopes of the main and inner cones expose a few scoria flows and local scoria falls but principally consist of complexes of the thin brecciated lava tongues, overlapping and bifurcating in the manner so characteristic of summit-fed andesites on steep slopes. The total volume of Mount Griggs is ~25 cubic km.
"Griggs's products are chiefly olivine-pyroxene andesites; 27 samples range continuously from 54.5 to 63.5% SiO2. They are consistently more potassic than products of the other Katmai cluster volcanoes, their K2O contents being 1.3-1.4% at 57.5% SiO2 and 1.7-1.9% at 60%. Isotopic data also suggest a source mixture and plumbing system independent of the other nearby centers.
"Numerous SO2-rich fumarolic jets occur between 1,940-m and 2,180-m elevation atop the inner cone and along a steep chute on its upper southwest slope. Orifice temperatures (measured by Dave Johnston in 1978-9) range from 96 degrees to 108 degrees C, and their condensates have pH ~1. Each orifice is constructing its own mound of sulfur sublimate. Downhill fumaroles are hottest and loudest, their roar commonly audible from the valley floor."

Name Origin

Mount Griggs was named in 1956 by Gilbert Grosvenor, National Geographic Society, for Robert Fiske Griggs (1881-1952), botanist and leader of six National Geographic Society expeditions to the Katma District from 1915 to 1930. These expeditions lead to the 1918 creation of the Katmai National Monument. This volcano was previously called "Knife Peak" (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.

Current Activity

No new updates for Griggs volcano since March 18, 2022, 3:33 pm.

Color Code Timeline

Reported Activity

Modern Eruptions

Bogoslof

Bogoslof Eruption Timeline

Bogoslof 1796/5

May 18, 1796 — 1804

From Miller and others (1998): "A small rocky prominence, called Ship Island or Ship Rock, was observed in 1768 by Russian explorers at the approximate site of Bogoslof Island; it disappeared through marine erosion by the end of the 19th century and little is known concerning its composition and origin (Byers, 1959). An explosive eruption of debris in 1796, followed by extrusion of viscous lava, built a second island by 1804, about 0.6 km south of Ship Rock. The second island was known successively as Ioann Bogoslof, Old Bogoslof, and Castle Rock. The vent agglomerate and hornblende andesite of Castle Rock, exposed on the southwest end of modern Bogoslof Island, represent early and late products, respectively, of this eruption (Byers, 1959)."
There is some discrepancy concerning the start date of this eruption. Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) and Dall (1870, 1884) report Baranov writing that this eruption began on the first of May, 1796. Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) writes that Kotzebue reported the eruption on the 7th of May (18th new style [Julian vs. Gregorian calendars]). Regardless of the specific date, it seems clear that the eruption did begin in early May,1796.
Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) summarizes Baranov's report as follows: "According to Baranov's report there suddenly arose a storm from the north on the first day of May 1796; and the sky grew dark, which lasted the whole day. During the following night the storm increased. On this and the following day a muffled din could be heard, and a far-off crashing sound, which resembled thunder. At the break of the third day the storm abated and the sky cleared. And now a flame was observed between Unalaska and Umnak, and north of the last-named island. It arose from the sea. And soon there was smoke, which lasted ten consecutive days. After that time something white, of rounded shape, was observed rising above the surface of the sea; and it grew very rapidly in size." Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) quotes Kotezebue's account of the eruption as follows: "On the 7th (18th New Style) of May 1796, an agent of the Russian American Company, Mr. Kriukov, was on the northernmost point of Umnak. Storm from NW had obscured the view toward the sea. On the 8th, the sky cleared up; and now a column of smoke could be observed rising from the sea a few miles off shore. Toward evening there was something black, which arose beneath the column of smoke just a little above the surface of the water. During the night, fire spouted upward from that location. At times this was so strong, and the amount so large, that on this 10-mile-distant island (25 versts, according to Veniaminov, I., p. 156) all objects could easily be discerned. Now an earthquake shook the island, and a horrible din echoed back from the mountains in the south. The emerging island threw boulders all the way to Umnak. With sunrise the earthquakes abated, the fire diminished. And now the newly emerged island could be seen in the shape of a pointed hat. One month later Mr. Kriukov found the island significantly taller. It had in the meantime continued to expel fire. Since then it has continued to grow in circumference and elevation; but the flames have abated, and only steam and smoke remain to be seen continuously."
Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) further summarizes eruption details: "Four years later no more smoke was seen; and eight years later (1804) hunters visited the island. They found that the water was warm; and the ground was still so hot that in many places it could not be walked on. Even a long time thereafter the island continued to grow in circumference and size. A Russian of very healthy judgment reported that the circumference amounted to 2.5 miles; the elevation to 350 feet. In the surrounding 3 miles the sea is covered with rocks. From the middle of the island to the point, he found that it was warm. And the steam, which arose from the crater, had a pleasant odor, probably from the mountain oil." "The elevation of St. J. Bogoslof is probably judged too low, according to Buch. At such a circumference the elevation should easily have been several thousand feet. Langsdorff's expression points up the same thing, when from his own perspective he calls the elevation a medium one. When he got his first view of the island on August 18, 1806, there were four conical mountains visible on the NW side. They rose by steps to a medium and highest elevation. The latter seemed to rise on all sides vertically like a column." Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) also writes that Langsdorff report the island to be 10-15 versts in circumference.
Reports of this eruption's impact on human or animal populations is generally not available, although Ransom (1948) writes that "* * * natives huddled in abject terror before their sod houses while fear crawled icily along their spines" and "Whole villages were wiped out as volcanic ash filled the sky and floated like wind-spume on the ocean. There it mixed with millions of bellied-up fish, cooked to a seething pulp by the boiling sea. Then came deluges of drenching rain greater than anything ever before known in those proverbially rainy, stormy regions." Ransom's descriptions are not found in any other historical reference and seem to owe more to imagination than to historical fact.
Newhall and Melson (1983) estimate the size of 1796 lava dome to be about 10x10^6 cubic meters. Based on Sapper's (1927) classification scheme, the Smithsonian Institution's online database of global volcanism estimates a tephra volume of 5.5 +/- 5 x 10^8 cubic meters.

Bogoslof 1806

1806 — 1823

Dall (1884) writes: "In 1806 fissures appeared, lined with crystals of sulphur. According to Langsdorff, who saw it in this year, it did not exhibit any special activity, though steam and smoke arose more or less constantly. In this year three baidarkas visited the island. On the north side soft lava flowed into the sea, and it was too hot to approach closely; but on the southern end a landing was effected. The peak was too sharp and rugged to be ascended, and the rock was very hot. A piece of seal meat suspended in a crevice was thoroughly cooked in a short time. There was no soil or fresh water." Langsdorff reported the size of the island in 1806 as 10-15 versts in circumference, and 2,500 feet in elevation.
Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) reports that Baranov reported the following in 1814 (possibly 1804?): "On the first of June, 1814, a baidarka was launched to observe the phenomenon from a closer proximity. When its occupants had approached to a distance of five versts, a violent current was observed between the pointed blind cliffs. In spite of this it was possible to go ashore at a very low point, where sea lions had occupied the rocks in large numbers. It appeared that the island consists entirely of precipices, covered with small rocks, which are continuously expelled from the crater. They obscure the view and nearly cover the entire surface of the island. Therefore it was impossible to make investigations on land. It was instead decided to sail around it. Nowhere could sweet water be found. In the year 1815 (1805?) a second expedition was sent to the island. This time the island was found to be much lower in elevation than in the previous year. The bad weather forced the people to remain there for six days. A very strong current flowed continuously around the island. The physiognomy of the island had changed completely. There were ravines filled with masses of rock, which continuously collapsed, whereupon new precipices opened up."
In 1816 and 1817, Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) writes that Eschscholtz reported no activity at Bogoslof. Grewingk (1850, translated 2003 by Fritz Jaensch) also reports that Dr. Stein reported smoking at Bogoslof in 1820: "And from the highest point of the mountain - which I call Kruzenstern Volcano - there arose, probably from the crater, columns of smoke (not fire). From a crevice at the foot of the mountain, a spring sprouted up in an arch like a waterfall. The entire island is a bare and barren rock; and only in a few places was there still snow, covered, it seemed, with volcanic ash. On the sketch there appears on the right sides Cook's "Ship Rock," which is much favored by the birds. And the island St. J. Bogoslof presents the spectre of deep fissures and lava streams (ispeshchren), traversing its surface. Its circumference amounted to 4 Italian miles (7 versts), and the elevation 500 ft., Engl., above sea level."
Veniaminov (1840, translated 1984) writes that "At last in 1823 it noticeably ceased either to grow or to erode. From the time of its appearance and until it ceased to increase in size, it was so hot that steam always rose from it and, at first, even the sea water around it was warm."
Newhall and Melson (1983) estimate the size of this lava dome to be about 10x10^6 cubic meters.

Bogoslof 1883/8

August 17, 1883 — 1895

The first indicator of this eruption was from residents of Unalaska, who first noticed steam rising from the ocean somewhat north of Ship Rock in 1882 (Merriam, 1901). In the fall of 1883, the eruption of Bogoslof was evident. The new island created by this eruption was called New Bogoslof or Grewingk, and is now called Fire Island (Miller and others, 1998). Miller and others summarizes as follows: "In 1884 the cone (presumably the dome was destroyed) had a diameter of 1 km, a craggy profile, and pinnacles that reached an altitude of about 150 m (Byers, 1959). In May of that year, officers of the revenue Marine steamer Corwin examined the Bogoslof group. They found Ship Rock, Old Bogoslof, and New Bogoslof connected into a single land mass by bars of volcanic debris and sand-bouldered beaches. Second Lieutenant J.C. Cantwell observed 15 separate vents on the upper third of New Bogoslof cone issuing jets of steam with great force and regularity; thick sulfur deposits surrounded most of the vents, and the temperature in a crack near the summit was estimated to exceed 260 degrees C. Great quantities of fine ash coated the slopes, but little coarse ejecta of flow lava was encountered (Henning and others, 1976). In 1895, New Bogoslof was still steaming vigorously, and was a flat-topped structure about 90 m high, separated by several hundred meters of open water from Old Bogoslof. By 1897 New Bogoslof had cooled (Byers, 1959).
Further details about the eruption are available from many sources; some of the most prominent accounts are summarized below.
Merriam (1901) wrote: "At the time of its discovery, September 27, 1883, by Captain Anderson of the schooner "Matthew Turner", it was in active eruption, throwing out large masses of heated rock and great volumes of smoke, steam, and ashes, which came from the apex and from numerous fissures on the sides and base, some of which were under the water-line. Large boulders were shot high in the air, which descending and striking the water, sent forth steam and a hissing sound. After nightfall fire was observed on the island. A month later Captain Hague of the schooner "Dora" approached it within a mile. He is quoted as saying that black smoke, like that from burning tar, was issuing from it, that it threw out flame, smoke, and red-hot rocks; and that, among the sea-lions observed near by were a number which had been scalded so that the hair had come off. He thinks many were killed. From the descriptions given him by Captain Anderson and Captain Hague, Professor George Davidson, of San Francisco, made a drawing, reproduced on page 206 of this article, representing the new volcano in the fall of 1883. Its height was estimated at from 800 to 1,200 feet. On October 20th of the same year the inhabitants of Unalaska were startled by an ominous black cloud, which appeared in the north and grew rapidly until it overspread the entire heavens and cut off the light of the sun. It then settled down very low and the air became dark like night. It finally broke and disappeared in a shower of ashes, which covered the ground and the houses, and adhered to the windows so that it was impossible to see through them. The first landing on New Bogoslof was made by the officers of the Revenue steamer Corwin (Captain M.A. Healy) on May 21, 1884, nine months after its discovery. Its altitude was found to be about 500 feet. No crater was discovered, but there was a 'great fissure,' the interior of which could not be seen owning to the steam, fumes of sulphur, and heat, which rendered entrance into it extremely dangerous if not impossible."
Merrill (1889) reports that the composition of the ashes which fell on Unalaska and the composition of volcanic samples collected from this eruption are so similar as to definitively state that the October 20, 1883 Unalaska ash came from Bogoslof.
Byers summarizes the remaining years of this eruption as follows: "In 1891, Merriam (1901, p. 313) visited the Bogoslof Islands and found steam and sulfur fumes escaping with a roaring noise from the principal fissure of New Bogoslof. An open channel separated Old and New Bogoslof. In 1895 when Becker and Dall (Becker, 1989, p. 26; Merriam, 1901, p. 317) visited the Bogoslof Islands, New Bogoslof was still steaming 'vigorously, though not violently' and had also been changed to a flat-topped island about 300 feet in altitude. Later reports in 1897 and 1899 by passing mariners indicate that New Bogoslof or Grewingk Island had finally cooled (Merriam, 1901, p. 319-320)."
Newhall and Melson (1983) estimate the volume of the lava dome produced in these eruptions to be about 40x10^6 cubic meters.

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Bogoslof 1906/3

March 1906 — January 1907

The Smithsonian Volcanoes of the World book and the Global Volcanism Program online database considers the time period between March, 1906, and September, 1907, to be one eruption at Bogoslof. However, the GeoDIVA database has separated the formation and destruction of Metcalf Cone (March, 1906-January, 1907) as one eruption, and the formation and destruction of McCulloch Peak (January 1907-September 1907) is treated as a separate eruption.
From Miller and others, 1998: "In 1906, a dome bearing a broken spire at its summit appeared midway between Old and New Bogoslof. This structure, called Metcalf Cone, exploded in late 1906 or early 1907, destroying its southern extent." Lieutenant-Commander Garrett first saw Metcalf Cone, and proposed for it the name Metcalf Cone.
On July 10, the USRCS Thetis "reconnoitered Bogoslof" and reported "* * * observed that a new island had sprung up between the two old ones, about 1/3 of the distance from the first one (which came up in 1801) to the second (1881) and connected to the first one by a ridge of land; a long spit runs out form the Southern end of the new island, just as one runs from each of the others. A crater pouring, firth vapor, is opened on the North side about 3/4 of the way up, and all around the island, vapor is spurting up through fissures, and the vapor is so thick over the surface of the island that it looks like bank of snow. There is no indication of boiling water, reported by Dirks, around the island. Sounded in 175 fms of water, within in three miles of the island, showing no general upheaval, but the water appears to be shoaler between the islands than it formerly were." These logbook pages are viewable at oldweather.s3.amazonaws.com/ow… and oldweather.s3.amazonaws.com/ow… .
Later, members of the S.S. Perry saw the same structure, and, not knowing of Garrett's previous name for it, called it Perry Peak." Logbooks from the US Revenue Cutter Service Perry are available at www.oldweather.org/ships/523c9…. The July 29, 1906 sighting is recorded on this page: oldweather.s3.amazonaws.com/ow… .
Jaggar (1908) states that the activity began in March, 1906, and summarizes various accounts and articles of this eruption as follows: "Lieutenant-Commander Garrett, U.S.N., reported that the Albatross reached the Bogoslof Islands May 29, 1906, and found a steaming new cone midway between the two older islands. It was connected with Grewingk by a low flat ridge, but separated by a channel from Castle Rock. This channel was later sounded by officers of the Revenue S.S. Perry, and seven fathoms were reported. Garrett wrote: 'The new land is conical in appearance, and consists of a mass of eruptive rocks, among which traces of sulphur are plainly visible. It possesses no distinct crater, but numerous vents among the rocks, from which volumes of steam issued.' The summit showed a broken horn bending to the northeast, 'as though the mass had been forced up through an aperture while in a plastic condition, the sides being quite smooth.' This horn proved a remarkable feature, and the key to the whole structure.
" * * * Garrett's suggestion of a rising plastic mass was correct. He proposed for the new hill the name 'Metcalf Cone' in honour of Secretary Metcalf.
"Mr. Robert Dunn visited the new cone in a schooner in July, 1906, and climbed the new peak. He saw that the pudding-like cone had a solid rock core, and that the salt-water lagoon which half encircled it on the north had a temperature varying from seventy to ninety degrees. There was no noise. The pinnacle on the summit was like a great parrot's beak, rounded and smooth on the west, but making an overhanging cliff forty feet high on the east. The steam-vents gave temperatures varying from 94 to 212 degrees, and the hottest vent, at the foot of the parrot cliff, was adjacent to rock practically incandescent, for here a piece of paper burst into flame. The top of the spine was about 390 feet above sea-level by pocket barometer."
Jaggar (1930) states that "at the beginning of 1907 Metcalf Cone was broken in two, while the channel between it and Castle Rock had filled itself with a new steaming heap of lava."
Newhall and Melson (1983) estimate that the volume of the Metcalf, McCullogh, and Tahoma Peak lava domes (1906-1910) was about 5x10^6 cubic meters. Simkin and Siebert (2002-) estimate a tephra volume of 5.1 +/- 5.0 x 10^8 cubic meters, based on Sapper's (1927) classification.

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Bogoslof 1907/1

January 1907 — September 1, 1907

The Smithsonian Volcanoes of the World book and Global Volcanism Program online database considers the time period between March, 1906, and September, 1907, to be one eruption at Bogoslof. However, the GeoDIVA database considers the formation and destruction of Metcalf Cone (March, 1906-January, 1907) one eruption, and the formation and destruction of McCulloch Peak (January 1907-September 1907) is treated as a separate eruption.
Miller and others (1998) summarizes this eruption, which began in early 1907, as follows: "[A]nother dome emerged, joining Metcalf Cone and Old Bogoslof (Byers, 1959). This dome, McCulloch Peak, was subsequently obliterated in a violent explosion on September 1, 1907 that showered Unalaska Village with 0.5 cm of ash and mantled the remaining Bogoslof Islands with debris." The Perry likely saw McCulloch Peak on June 21, 1907, as they recorded in their logbook "Some unfamiliar pinnacle rocks between Castle and Perry Islands" (see logbook entry on Old Weather website: oldweather.s3.amazonaws.com/ow….
Jaggar (1908) reports: "In the spring of 1907 Captain Dirks, a local trader, brought word that a still newer peak had risen beside Metcalf Cone. The Cutter McCulloch visited the scene in July, 1907, and reported that this was indeed true, and moreover, Metcalf Cone had half collapsed, and the channel between it and Castle Rock was filled up with the new steaming heap, "McCulloch Peak," and a wide stretch of gravel wash. Such was substantially the state of affairs when the Technology Expedition arrived August 7, 1907. A day was spent in exploring, photographing, and collecting specimens. The landing was made in dories in the midst of a herd of roaring sea-lions.
"* * * As a land mass above tidewater it was a continuous island about two miles long, with the new steaming cones in the middle 400 to 500 feet high. Grewingk, flat-topped and cliff-encompassed, guards the north end of the island, while Castle Rock, pinnacled and jagged, rises on the south. The intervening spaces were filled with sand, gravel, and volcanic bombs, making wave-washed bars ten or twelve feet above sea-level. It was unbelievable that only sixteen months ago there was nothing there, between the north and south islets, but open water, and some ten fathoms of that!
"* * * All the pinnacles of Castle Rock were sharpened between 1906 and 1907 - probably by the bombardment of falling stones and sand at the midwinter season when a violent explosion broke Metcalf Cone in twain. There are marks of flood-waves and bombs and pumice on the flats, which give good reason for the belief that the moment which ended the life of Metcalf Cone and began that of McCulloch Peak, in the winter of 1906-07, was explosive."
Jaggar (1908) estimates that old Castle Rock rose about twenty-five feet during the past eight months, and McCulloch Peak was over 400 feet high with a base of nearly 2000 feet across at sea-level. While Jaggar was at Bogoslof (August, 1907) the volcano was nearly enclosed by a lagoon of 90 degree salt water. McCulloch peak was steaming, and larger vents were coated in sulfur. Metcalf Cone was a sheer face of rock descending to the waters of the hot lagoon on the McCulloch side, and was about 400 feet wide with a 360 foot-wide base.
Jaggar (1908) further reports: "On September 1, twenty-four days after the Technology Expedition left Bogoslof, the natives, traders and revenue officers who live at Iliuliuk saw toward the west a dense black cloud rising and the air was full of sulfur fumes. About five o'clock in the afternoon ash and sand began to fall, followed by rain and distant rumbling. A quarter-inch layer from this snowstorm of sand settled on roofs and shipping and grassy landscape, making all appear wan and drooping with a monotonous gray mantle.
"The Cutter McCulloch * * * visited Bogoslof [in October] and [found] McCulloch Peak absolutely gone, a steaming lagoon in its place, and the rest of the island piled high with fallen debris. The half of Metcalf Cone was still 'standing in grim silence as a headstone at the grave of the departed peak.' The north slope of Metcalf showed the smooth cone curve, concave in profile upward, so characteristic of cinder-cones like Fuji or Vesuvius, and this marked for Bogoslof one more step in the cone-building process."
Newhall and Melson (1983) estimate that the volume of the Metcalf, McCullogh, and Tahoma Peak lava domes (1906-1910) was about 5x10^6 cubic meters.

Bogoslof 1908/1

January 1908

In July, 1908, observers on the vessel McCulloch reported that Metcalf Cone of the Bogoslof Islands was completely gone (Jaggar, 1930). This observation suggests that there was an explosive eruption during the winter of 1907-08. Possible evidence of this eruption was witnessed by observers on the Albatross early in the year of 1908.
From Hunnicutt (1943): "The crew of the U.S.S. Albatross in 1908, while traveling off the islands, witnessed an uprising of a subterranean volcano which doubtless later added to the bulk of Bogosloff. The surface of the ocean rose in a gigantic, dome-like swelling, suggestive of a colossal soap bubble, then receded. This occurred several times and before each subsidence there was a tremendous escape of gas. Gigantic clouds of smoke and steam issued from where the water had humped itself."

Bogoslof 1909/9

September 1909 — September 19, 1910

Miller and others (1998) summarizes the September 1909-1910 eruption of Bogoslof as follows: "Yet another conical islet, Tahoma Peak, was formed during the winter of 1909-1910 in the bay created by the destruction of McCulloch Peak. Explosions in September of 1910 produced a deep crater at its summit (Byers, 1959); this was apparently the first documented crater in a Bogoslof dome (Jaggar, 1930)."
Powers (1916) relates the following detailed information: "Renewed activity in the bay between Old Bogoslof and Fire Island is reported in September, 1909. The bay had closed to form a lagoon, in which two small islands had risen, once of which gave off steam. The water in the lagoon was also constantly steaming. The two small islands were apparently just beginning to rise as new rocky spines, for on June 16, 1910, they are reported to have united and risen to a height of 178 feet above the lake level. Old Bogoslof, Fire Island, and the southwest shore of the lagoon remained the same as in the preceding year, but the new spines had become connected with the northeast shore of the lagoon, and a portion of the shore on that side had risen ten feet. Although the temperature of the salt lagoon ranged from 62 degrees to 100 degrees F., there was little activity in the new rock-masses and water was boiling up from only a few places near the lagoon.
"A survey of Bogoslof Island was made on September 10, 1910, under the direction of Captain J.H. Quinan of the U.S. Revenue Cutter Tahoma, showing that the island was about one and a half statute miles long and three-quarters of a mile wide, as shown in Figure 2. The elevations of the peaks were: Fire Island, 175 feet, Castle Rock (Old Bogoslof), 289 feet; the higher of the two central peaks, 178 feet; the lower, 100 feet. The lower of the central peaks is given the name Tahoma Peak by Captain Quinan in his report, and the higher is called Perry Peak in spite of the fact that the remaining portions of Perry Peak were reported to have disappeared by July , 1908. [There is some discrepancy about when Perry Peak disappeared; Powers says by July, 1908, while other sources say it disappeared by September, 1908] In view of the records given above, it seems probable that Captain Quinan saw a new peak which rose in 1909-10 in the same place that Perry Peak occupied from 1906-08. No name is suggested for this new peak.
"Steam issued from the base and sides of the new peaks at the time of the visit, and steam was issuing from the salt lagoon shown on the map. Between the new peaks and Fire Island, in the mud-covered area near the small lagoon, an area of several hundred yards was in violent agitation. Boiling water was being ejected through the mud, and in two pools, each about four feet in diameter, water was being thrown to a height of five feet by the rapidly escaping steam. Another seat of activity was on the northeast side of Tahoma Peak, at the edge of the main lagoon. Explosions had recently taken place here, according to Captain Quinan's report, and a group of steaming conical rocks had risen since the explosion. The water around these rocks was boiling, but not so violently as near the smaller lagoon.
"* * * [F]ortunately Captain Quinan sailed back toward the island on September 18, and when about twenty-five miles away in the early morning witnessed an eruption. Forked lightning in the direction of Bogoslof was seen before daylight, and when Bogoslof was sighted the new central peak was seen to be in a state of eruption. Immense clouds of vapor, smoke, and ashes issued from the peak and enveloped the entire island. Flames were reported at the peak, and lightning followed by thunder appeared in the cauliflower cloud of smoke and volcanic dust which rose to a height of several thousand feet above the island. The eruption lasted during the several hours the steamer remained in the vicinity, and two days later the central peak was observed to be still steaming.
"The eruption of September, 1910, seems to have opened a true crater in the top of the central peak - the first important crater which has been reported on any of the masses of very viscous rock which have been slowly pushed out from the top of the submarine volcano to form the "rocks' and "peaks" of the last hundred and fifty years."
Hunnicutt (1943) reports more colorfully on the experiences of Captain Quinan and his crew, stating "the Tahoma experienced a violent electrical storm. Saw molten lava, rock, steam, and smoke shooting into the air from the center of a salt lagoon that had been formed on one spur of the island. The wind created by the disturbance could be felt for several miles. Red-hot lava literally covered the Tahoma with volcanic sand and pumice, and the ship made for the leeward of the island, about six miles, where the temperature was uncomfortably warm. So much lava fell on the ship it had to be hosed down. (September 1910). The Tacoma returned several weeks later, and found a land of hot ashes and baked mud, and from the center a great column of scalding water spouted. There was still a loud rumbling form beneath the surface and it was so loud the men, when standing only a few feet apart, had to shout at each other to be heard. There was pitiful evidence of the terrific heat, for bird skeletons were found in great numbers lying about the island where they had been veritably roasted alive. The heat and the fumes had been so potent that the tiny skeletons disintegrated into fine powder when an attempt was made to pick them up."
Powers (1916) states that there are no reports on Bogoslof for 1911 or 1912.
Newhall and Melson (1983) estimate that the volume of the Metcalf, McCullogh, and Tahoma Peak lava domes (1906-1910) was about 5x10^6 cubic meters.

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Powers (1916) gives the following information on this eruption: "[I]n July, 1913, a brief statement refers to the crater [of Tahoma Peak] as being plainly visible with steam and smoke slowly issuing from it. Activity apparently ceased during this year, for the commanding officer of the steamer Patterson, which passed Bogoslof on its way to pick up survivors of the Tahoma [The Tahoma struck a reef on the 20th of September, 1914], reports that 'the Bogoslof Islands showed three peaks in 1914, none of which was smoking.'"
Jaggar (1930) relates similar information: "In July, 1913, this crater had steam and smoke slowly issuing from it, but the following year all smoking had ceased. During the next eight years Tahoma Peak, as the new hill of 1910 was called, was eroded away, and a channel was again opened between Castle Rock and Grewingk so that a boat could sail between the two older islands. Grewingk had greatly diminished in size, and Castle Rock was now two rocky horns with a big accumulation of sand and gravel heaps piled against them, especially on the northern and eastern sides, these trailing off into a long sand spit at the north, and the whole of this larger island was surrounded by sand beaches."

Bogoslof 1926/7

July 17, 1926 — June 1928

Miller and others (1998) summarizes this eruption: "Renewed submarine explosions between the two islands [Castle Rock and Fire Island] in 1926 produced another conical dome by early 1927. A tephra ring, located about 3 m above high tide, surrounded the new dome and connected it to Fire Island and Castle Rock, thus forming a single elongate island. By July, 1927, the circular dome was 60 m high and 300 m across and was circled by a shallow lagoon of warm water."
Jaggar (1930) records the start of this eruption as follows: "The new activity had started in July of 1926 when there was open water between the two older rocks [Castle Rock and Fire Island]. An explosive eruption was then seen by a whaler, and the natives reported explosions July 17 as seen from nearby islands. The water was greatly muddied and the whaler on August 12 saw black smoke with darkness accompanied by thunder and lightning, ending with a cloud of white steam and 'fire' about 2 p.m. There was also an explosion in December, 1926, and it is probable that the lava dome of 1927 emerged thereafter. Probably the eruption began with a series of lava pulsations, alternating with explosion."
Jaggar visited the Bogoslof Islands in June, 1927 (Jaggar, 1930), and reports the following: "The writer visited Bogoslof for the second time July 6, 1927, and found a new period of moderate lava activity inaugurated, with a pile of steaming lava rising from a warm lagoon in the midst of sand banks, and again these banks joined all of Bogoslof into one island with a complete ring-shaped salt water lagoon, surrounded in turn by a complete ring of sand permitting no connection with the sea except by seepage. The lagoon was at 70 degrees F., there were the usual herds of sea lions and myriads of birds, the bottom sand and pebbles of the lagoon were all coated with orange colored ochre, the lagoon was everywhere only two or three feet deep, there were numerous skeletons of dead birds on the beach, and in the sand were impact craters made by newly fallen bombs having rough aa surfaces. There were blocks of pumice one to two feet in diameter. The central lava heap was about 200 feet high and 1,000 feet wide. Its crest consisted of uniform aa clinker, steaming much more heavily than in this picture of a year later. It made no noise, and it is characteristic of Bogoslof that during most of the visits reported noise has been absent."
Jaggar (1930) ends with "A landing party on Bogoslof July 27, 1929 reported all quiet."
Newhall and Melson (1983) estimate the total volume of the lava dome produced during this event to be about 1x10^6 cubic meters.

Bogoslof 1931/10

October 31, 1931

Jaggar (1932) reports: ""Captain Nelson saw fire issuing from Bogoslof October 31, 1931, and found quantities of pumice near Umnak Island south of it. This observer believed Bogoslof to be continually smoking, according to his experience, but the 'fire' was unusual."
In 1934, further mention is made of Bogoslof. Hunnicutt (1943) reports that "In 1934 Bogosloff was visited by a scientific party form the Coast Guard vessel Chelan. When the men went on shore they feared the island would explode beneath their feet, but the scientist with them explained that the only live part of the island, volcanically speaking, was one peak named McCullock Peak which smoked continually at that time, and beyond this peak, on the opposite shore of the island, was a fissure visible at low tide. When the tide came in, steam and gas would rise out of this crevice and bubble and steam on the surface of the sea."

Bogoslof 1951/9

September 21, 1951

Jones (1952) describes this possible eruption as follows: "Lieutenant Sinclair, of the ship TAKL 36, reported running through muddy water for 2 miles 3.7 miles off the coast of Bogoslof on September 21 [1951]. G.R. MacCarthy visited Bogoslof early in November and reported that there were no signs of activity for many years past." This muddy water could be evidence of an eruption or submarine landslide at Bogoslof (Byers, 1959).

Bogoslof 1992/7

July 6, 1992 — July 24, 1992

McGimsey and others (1995) summarize this eruption as follows: "The recent eruption began in early July, 1992. At about 3:00 pm ADT on July 6, an eruption cloud rising to 3 km above Bogoslof Island was identified on NOAA satellite imagery. A few hours later pilots visually confirmed the steam and ash plume.
"Satellite imagery showed intermittent small plumes through July 13. Continuous emission occurred during the next two days with the steam and ash plume rising up to 5.5 km and extending 100 km to the SE. At 4:23 pm ADT on July 17 pilots reported a rapidly rising mushroom-shaped plume up to 4.5 km altitude. Inclement weather prevented direct observation of the island. The activity remained intermittent with an episode of vigorous steam and ash emission beginning about 5:00 pm ADT on July 20 that produced a plume as high as 8 km by 1725. A profusely steaming new lava dome at the north end of the island adjacent to the 1927 dome was first sighted on July 21 and confirmed by U.S. Coast Guard observations and photography on July 24. The last report of steaming and minor ash emission was July 24, and except for residual steaming of the dome, activity had subsided by late July, 1992.
"AVO responded to the eruption by compiling pilot reports, monitoring satellite imagery for ash plumes, collecting photographs and video footage of the activity, and disseminating information to government agencies and the media.
"U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) scientists who approached the island by ship several times later in the summer to assess the impact on sea mammals and birds photographed the new dome. During the summer of 1994, an AVO scientist spent a day examining the island and collecting samples of the new lava dome (Harbin, 1994)."
"The dome, measuring 150 m x 275 m across and approximately 150 m high, has a steep-sided central spire surrounded by prismatically jointed, block debris that originally formed more gentle slopes [see figure 11 in original text]. By the summer of 1994, the northern and northwestern sides of the dome had been reduced to sheer sea cliffs. The dome is composed principally of gray to black porphyritic hornblende-andesite (Harbin, 1994)."
Reeder and McGimsey (1995) report an approximate dome volume for this eruption as 1.6x10^6 cubic meters.

Bogoslof 2016/12

December 12, 2016 — August 30, 2017

From Coombs and others (2019): "Without a local seismic network, precursory seismicity was only recognized retrospectively. Wech et al. (2018) show that seismicity first occurred in September in the form of volcano-tectonic earthquakes, mostly on September 28-29 (swarm S1of Tepp et al. 2019). Wech et al. (2018) interpret these events as likely caused by magmatic intrusion into the middle to upper crust. A smaller earthquake swarm occurred in early October, with sporadic earthquakes continuing until the eruption in December (Tepp et al. 2019).
"From December 12 through March 13, explosions occurred at a mean rate of once every 58 h (2.4 days). Many of the explosions during this period were preceded by repeating earthquakes that accelerated into an explosion, characterized by increasing magnitude and becoming closer together in time, described by Wech et al. (2018) as 'slow-clap' seismicity and also described in Tepp et al. (2019) and Tepp and Haney (2019). On the basis of T-phase character, Wech et al. (2018) interpret these as occurring in the shallow crust.
"Seismicity remained at fairly low levels in October and November. In early December, days before the first detected infrasound, earthquakes with weak T-phases again suggested mid- to shallow-crustal magma movement (Wech et al. 2018). On December 12, the first infrasound signal from Bogoslof marked the beginning of the eruption. The signal, later recognized as event 1, was accompanied by a weak seismic signal, but no cloud was observed in satellite images. Infrasound for event 2, later the same day, has a relatively high frequency index (FI; ratio of high-frequency to low-frequency infrasound), suggesting a subaerial vent (Fee et al. 2019). On December 14, AVO received an email report from St. George, 308 km north-northwest of Bogoslof, about intermittent sulfur smell, likely corresponding to activity at Bogoslof. A Sentinel-2 satellite image taken minutes after event 3 on December 14 captured intense steaming from a subaerial vent and new pyroclastic deposits on the island and suspended in the surrounding ocean (Fig. 4a). Events 4 and 5 occurred on December 16 and 19. These first five explosions were not detected in real time, only after retrospective analysis of data streams. Thus, we have no direct observations of the character of these explosions.
"Satellite imagery beginning December 14 shows that uplift of Bogoslof Island occurred and may have been associated with cryptodome emplacement. A Sentinel-2 satellite image from December 21 (Waythomas et al. 2019a) shows an approximately 300-m long oval-shaped raised mass just north of Castle Rock (a remnant lava dome from the 1796-1804 eruptive period; see Fig. 3). This feature was not present in a Sentinel-2 image from December 14 (Waythomas et al. 2019a; their Fig. 5a). Preliminary analysis of DEMs generated by stereo satellite pairs shows that this feature continued to grow throughout the eruption (A. Diefenbach, written comm. 2019).
"No elevated surface temperatures were seen in satellite monitoring checks at Bogoslof until January 19, and neither the uplifted block nor surrounding areas were visibly steaming in December or January in a way that would be consistent with lava effusion (Figs. 3 and 6). Samples of the material exposed along the steep, eastward face of the uplift (see Waythomas et al. 2019b) are trachyandesite lava with 58-60 wt% SiO2 and are a different composition than the dominant juvenile basalt magma erupted in 2016-2017 (Loewen et al. 2019). Given the lack of thermal signature, as well as the composition of this feature, we suggest that this uplifted feature is likely the roof above a shallow cryptodome.
"Several pilots observed a volcanic cloud in the vicinity of Bogoslof on December 21 (Fig. 4b), and were the first alert to AVO that Bogoslof had become active. A pilot later the same day reported seeing 'a new land mass' in the island cluster. This event, event 6, began a period of activity that lasted a little less than a month, with explosive events 6-22 occurring at a rate of about one every 40 h. They produced volcanic clouds of heights up to 11 km, with variable durations (2 to 102 min), and about half produced detected lightning (Table 1). Most (80 %) consisted of single seismic pulses.
"Some of the only direct observations of activity occurred during event 9 on December 23, when observers aboard a Coast Guard vessel in the area reported ash emissions, lightning, and the ejection of incandescent lava and fragmental material that lasted about an hour. The cloud from event 16 on January 5 rose to 11.8 km asl and was observed by numerous pilots and mariners (Fig. 4c).
"A Worldview-3 image from December 25 (Fig. 6b) shows a bilobate submarine vent area and new pyroclastic deposits enlarging the island and beginning to enclose a vent lagoon. On December 29, data derived from US National Imagery Systems indicated a nearly complete ring of pyroclastic deposits around a more circular, submerged, ~ 450-m-across vent area. On January 10, passengers on a helicopter that flew from Dutch Harbor to Bogoslof took photographs and video of the island that showed discolored and roiling water in the crescent-shaped vent area, and the area of uplift from December (Fig. 3b). A Worldview-3 image from January 11 (Fig. 6c) shows continued growth of the island, and abundant meter-scale ballistics on the north and south ends of the island (Waythomas et al. 2019a, their Fig. 7).
"Satellite images, pilot reports, and ground-based photos show that event 23 on January 18 was the first demonstrably ash-rich cloud of the eruption sequence. Previous explosions produced clouds that were white in color with almost no ash signal in satellite data (Schneider et al. 2019).
"Prior to event 23, as with many other explosions on the first half of the eruption, seismic stations on neighboring islands picked up precursory seismicity in the form of repeating earthquakes that became more closely spaced in time during the runup to the explosion (Tepp et al. 2019). These lasted for about 11 h. Infrasound data show that the explosion itself lasted about 80 min and was pulsatory (Lyons et al. 2019b), with seven discrete bursts of strong seismicity (Searcy and Power 2019). Despite the event’s duration, only modest lightning was produced (14 strokes; Van Eaton et al. 2019).
"Pilots reports, visual satellite images, and thewest-facing FAA web camera in Dutch Harbor (Fig. 4d) indicated that the explosion produced a dark-gray ash cloud. MODIS satellite images show the cloud rose as high as 8.5 kmasl before drifting northeast over the Alaska Peninsula. An ash signal in the brightness-temperature-difference (BTD) satellite retrieval was seen along the leading cloud edge, suggesting that the cloud interior may have been opaque (Schneider et al. 2019). This event produced 1.9 kt of SO2 and was the first since event 13 on December 31 to produce more than 0.2 kt SO2 (Lopez et al. 2019).
"A mid-infrared MODIS satellite image collected minutes after the explosion showed a possible "recovery pixel". These occur when the sensor encounters a very hot object and saturates, suggesting lava or hot tephra must have been present above the water surface (D. Schneider, written comm. 2017). These were the first elevated surface temperatures detected by satellite imagery of the eruption. Clouds moved in to obscure the volcano soon after, with no additional views prior to January 20. Because event 23 was not detected on the Okmok infrasound array, we do not have infrasound FI analysis for this event, which for other events provides information on subaerial versus submarine venting (Fee et al. 2019).
"In the week following event 23, five explosions (events 24-28) occurred with an average repose time of 42 h between them (Table 1, Fig. 8). These events had total infrasound durations of 3-15 min, produced modest lightning, observable volcanic clouds, and each up to 0.6 kt of SO2 (Table 1). None showed a clear ash signature in satellite data.
"A Worldview-2 image acquired about 10 h after event 26 shows the island with a lagoon, open to the east, with two circular craters. The one to the northwest had upwelling within it, suggesting it was above the vent for the event 26 explosion (Waythomas et al. 2019a, their Fig. 8).
"About 84 h after event 28, the longest sustained explosion of the eruptive sequence produced significant ash and resulted dramatic changes to Bogoslof Island. Event 29 comprised more than 10 short-duration explosions that were detected in seismic, infrasound, and lightning data, took place over several hours on January 31, and produced several discrete volcanic clouds.
"The event started with no detected precursors, and activity escalated from 08:40 to 09:30, as indicated by increased seismic tremor and high amplitude infrasound signals. At 09:00, a continuous volcanic plume extended for a distance of more than 200 km towards the east-southeast over Unalaska Island at an altitude of 5.9 km asl. Event 29 produced 190 lightning strokes (Table 1; Van Eaton et al. 2019) and the most significant SO2 emission since December 22, 2016 (3.6 kt; Lopez et al. 2019).
"Tephra accumulation at the vent produced a demonstrably dry volcanic edifice for the first time during event 29. Data derived from US National Imagery Systems shortly after the event showed light steaming from an apparently dry eruption crater about 400 m in diameter and as much as 100 m deep below the west crater rim. Whereas most previous explosive events in the sequence, with the possible exception of event 23 on January 18, issued from a vent in shallow seawater, freshly erupted tephra formed an almost 200-m-wide barrier separating the vent from the sea. A Worldview-3 image from about 15 h later the same day (Fig. 6d) shows that the crater had already begun to fill with seawater. As with several of the events, large ballistic blocks were visible along the island’s north southwest shoreline (Waythomas et al. 2019a, their Fig. 9).
"Event 29 resulted in ashfall on Unalaska Island including trace (< 0.8 mm) amounts in the community of Dutch Harbor/ Unalaska. A sample of ash collected in Dutch Harbor comprises free crystals of plagioclase, clinopyroxene, amphibole, and rare biotite, as well as particles that display a range of groundmass textures from microlitic to glassy, and that vary from dense to vesicular (Loewen et al. 2019). The material is consistent with being a mixture of juvenile basalt scoria and non-juvenile lithics.
"Following event 29, a series of smaller explosive events occurred from February 3 to 20 (events 30-36; Table 1). During this period, the inter-event times became more variable, with some pauses of up to 9 days between events. Explosions during this time lasted minutes to a few tens of minutes, produced clouds that rose from 4.6 to 8.6 km asl (Schneider et al. 2019), 0-92 strokes of lightning (Van Eaton et al. 2019), and modest SO2 (0-1.4 kt; Lopez et al. 2019).
"A series of satellite images from January 31 through February 12 shows little change in the island’s morphology after event 29 (Fig. 6d-e; Waythomas et al. 2019a). Elevated surface temperatures detected in two MODIS images from February 6 likely reflected hot new deposits from event 31 on February 4. A high-resolution Worldview-2 satellite image from February 23 also shows little change except for the presence of ballistics particles ejected during events 32-36 (February 13-20) and distributed across the island (Waythomas et al. 2019a). A clear view from March 3 similarly shows only minor changes (Fig. 6f).
"The final event in this time interval, event 36 on February 20, was an excellent example of a Bogoslof explosion with a precursory seismic sequence (see Fig. 4 of Coombs et al. 2018). A classic sequence of coalescing earthquakes served as a prelude to the series of energetic eruptive signals that made up the event. Earthquakes were first detected at 20:42 on February 19. The sequence then maintained a relatively low rate until about 00:55 (February 20) when the rate suddenly increased to about 30 earthquakes per hour. The rate then progressively increased over the next hour almost merging to tremor by 2:00. Earthquakes ceased at 2:07 and after a1-min break transitioned to tremor. The eruptive signals consisted of about 9 blasts that were captured on multiple infrasound arrays resulting in a 40-min long explosion. The resulting plume reached 6.1 km asl and was elongated, stretching to the east-southeast over Unalaska Island. Pilots and observers on Unalaska Island at the time clearly observed the white, ice-rich cloud (Fig. 4e).
"After a 16-day pause, event 37 on March 8 lasted 200 min. It had the largest infrasound energy (Lyons et al. 2019a), seismic tremor magnitude (Tepp et al. 2019), most lightning (1437 strokes; Van Eaton et al. 2019), largest SO2 emission (21.5 kt; Lopez et al. 2019), and most significant ash cloud (Schneider et al. 2019) of any event in the eruptive sequence (though not the highest reduced displacement; Haney et al. 2019a). VIIRS satellite images showed the resulting cloud reached between 10.6 and 13.4 km asl and drifted east over Unalaska Island. Minor ashfall of a few millimeters was reported by a mariner near Cape Kovrizkha (northwest Unalaska Island; Fig. 1) who collected ash from his vessel. Like the ash sample from January 31, this ash contains particles of juvenile basaltic scoria and free crystals with minor amounts of what appear to be volcanic lithics (Loewen et al. 2019). A barely perceptible ashfall deposit was reported at Unalaska/Dutch Harbor.
"Event 37 also changed the shape of the island and temporarily dried out the vent area, as seen in a Landsat-8 image from March 8 (not shown). In infrasound data, event 37 shows a mix of low and high FI, consistent with an eruption from both submarine and subaerial vent(s) during this event (Fee et al. 2019).
"A March 11 WorldView-3 image (Fig. 6g) shows the west coast of the island grew significantly since March 3 (Fig 6f), with about 250m of new land west of the 1926-1927 dome. A new ~ 150-m wide vent was also observed on the north coast of the island, and ballistics ejecta clustered on the eastern side of the island (Waythomas et al. 2019a, their Fig. 11).
"On March 10 and 11, two multi-hour seismic swarms each produced hundreds of earthquakes as detected on station MAPS (Tepp et al. 2019), but neither led directly to an explosion. A few hours later, a precursory swarm (Tepp et al. 2019) began on March 11 and culminated on March 13 in event 38. This event produced a small cloud that reached as high as 4.1 km asl and drifted south-southwest.
"Following event 38 on March 13, there was a 9-week pause in explosive activity at Bogoslof. The only detected unrest observed during the hiatus was a swarm of volcano-tectonic earthquakes on April 15. The swarm lasted for several hours, comprised 118 detected earthquakes (catalog of Wech et al. 2018) with magnitudes between ~ 0.8 and 2.2, and is interpreted to reflect magmatic intrusion in the mid to upper crust because of the earthquakes’ weak T-phases (Wech et al. 2018).
"Satellite images from this period show the rapid surface reworking and erosion of new volcanic deposits on Bogoslof Island and coastline erosion by wave action (Waythomas et al. 2019a). Photos (Fig. 5a) and a Worldview-3 image from May 11 (Fig. 6h) show that the vent lagoon remained hot throughout the hiatus, evidenced by steam rising from the crater lagoon.
"From May 16 through August 30, AVO detected 32 explosive events at the volcano. In contrast to the events of December 2016-March 2017, few of the explosions in the later phase were preceded by detectable seismic precursors, inhibiting AVO’s ability to forecast eruptive activity (Coombs et al. 2018), though retrospective analysis of hydrophone data showed that weaker precursors were still often present (Tepp et al. 2019). Fewer events produced detectable lightning after event 40 on May 28 (Van Eaton et al. 2019). This second phase also included effusion of two short-lived subaerial lava domes.
"After a nine-week hiatus, Bogoslof erupted without detectable geophysical precursors on May 17 (event 39). This explosion lasted 200 min and produced an ash cloud that reached as high as 10 km asl and drifted south along the edge of a mass ofweather clouds, as seen in GOES satellite imagery (Schneider et al. 2019) and reported by pilots. Trace ashfall (< 0.8mm) was reported in Nikolski, Alaska, 123 km southwest of Bogoslof
(Fig. 1). As with ash samples from the previous two events, this one contains about 40 % free crystals, though the remainder of this sample is richer in juvenile scoria (as opposed to lithic fragments) than previous ones (Loewen et al. 2019).
"Following event 39, an oblique photo showed that the crater lake was breached with a 550-m wide gap along the north shore and that the northeast shore was extended by another 300 m from new tephra deposits (Fig. 5b). Eleven days after event 39, explosive event 40 occurred on May 28, also with no detected precursors. This eruption produced an ash cloud that rose to 10.1 km asl as shown in MODIS satellite images
(Schneider et al. 2019). The cloud drifted to the northeast and was reported by numerous pilots, including a report of 'sulfur' smell in cockpit from a plane about 800 km from Bogoslof. A Worldview-3 satellite image collected about 18 min after the start of the event shows the initial development of the eruption cloud (Fig. 4f; Waythomas et al. 2019a).
"These two explosive events, which occurred just after the hiatus, are among the most energetic of the eruptive sequence. They both produced appreciable SO2 clouds as detected in satellite data (9.4 and 7.7 kt; Lopez et al. 2019) and generated among the highest number of lightning strokes (647 and 719; Van Eaton et al. 2019; Fig. 8). The remnant SO2 cloud from event 40 on May 28 was still detectable over Hudson Bay, over 4000 km east of Bogoslof, on June 2. Of the 25 events analyzed by Haney et al. (2019a), the co-eruptive tremor of these two events had the highest reduced displacement of any in the sequence-both yield values of about 50 cm2, which is comparable to values calculated for eruption tremor from the largest eruptions in Alaska over the past 20 years (e.g., Redoubt in 2009; McNutt et al. 2013).
"Cosmo SkyMed radar imagery from May 31 shows a large portion of the north side of the island was removed during May 28 explosive activity, leaving a crescent-shaped bay, open to the north. This configuration of the island remained essentially intact through June 12 (Fig. 6i).
"As seen previously from a March 8 Landsat image, sometime following May 28, intense steaming recommenced from an area just southwest of the vent lagoon. This region, about 300 m in diameter, remained hot and emitting steam throughout the eruption and afterwards (Fig. 6i-l), and may have been the site of shallow magma intrusion or a filled-in vent area.
"Early June brought a series of small explosions and growth of a lava dome that breached sea level on June 5, and was then destroyed on June 10.
"Several hours after a swarm of very small earthquakes on May 31, event 41 was a 5-min long explosion that produced a small, water-rich cloud that reached as high as 7.3 km asl. Following this, cloudy weather prevented clear views of the volcano through June 4. A Sentinel 1-B SAR image from June 4 shows no dome in the crater lagoon (Fig. 7a). Midday on June 5, data derived from US National Imagery Systems indicate that a small protrusion of lava had breached water level immediately between the 1926-1927 and 1992 lava domes in northern portion of vent lagoon. By June 6, low-resolution satellite images show distinctly elevated surface temperatures at Bogoslof, suggesting that hot lava was at the surface (Fig. 8). Sentinel-1 SAR images show the growth of the dome from June 7 through June 9 (Fig. 7b,c). On June 7, data derived from US National Imagery Systems showed that the new dome was about 110 m in diameter. The dome was also seen in a COSMO SkyMed radar image from June 8 (Waythomas et al. 2019a; their Figure 15).
"During the interval of lava effusion, several small explosive events (42-47) occurred that did not disrupt the growing dome as shown by Sentinel-1 SAR data from June 9, which confirmed that dome was still there after event 47 (Fig. 7c). Several of the events (44, 45, and 47) have infrasound frequencies consistent with a subaerial vent (Fee et al. 2019).
"The June 5 lava dome was short-lived, as it was completely destroyed during a long, pulsatory explosive event on June 10 (event 48). This event started with discrete explosions detected on the Okmok infrasound array as early as 8:27 but intensifying from 11:18 to 11:38. Starting at about 12:16, activity transitioned into nearly continuous seismic and infrasound tremor signals for about 40 min. Shorter bursts of tremor continued
until 14:51, for an envelope of activity that lasted several hours. VIIRS satellite images of the resulting cloud showed it reached as high as 9.5 km asl and drifted to the northwest. Satellite data also indicated that at least part of the volcanic cloud was more ash-rich than many of those seen
previously in the Bogoslof eruptive sequence to date, suggesting that the eruption may have fragmented and incorporated the lava dome that was emplaced earlier that week (Schneider et al. 2019). This event generated 31 detected lightning strokes (Van Eaton et al. 2019).
"A Worldview-3 image from June 10, acquired after event 48, shows that the June 5 dome was no longer present (Waythomas et al. 2019a). Another, clearer Worldview-3 image from June 12 (Fig. 6i) showed ballistic blocks distributed uniformly around the island with the highest concentrations in the southeast and southwest sectors-likely remnants of the June 5 dome (Waythomas et al. 2019a). The FI of infrasound
from this event gradually decreases in the last hour of the event, suggesting a change from subaerial to submarine venting after the destruction of the lava dome (Fee et al. 2019; their Fig. 8).
"On June 13, event 49 comprised a series of four explosions that started at 01:44 and ended at about 04:34. Each pulse lasted between 10 and 30 min and generated volcanic clouds that rose to a maximum height of 3.8 km asl and dissipated within about 30 min. Residents of Unalaska/Dutch Harbor reported smelling sulfur, and winds were consistent with a source at Bogoslof. An additional 2-min long explosion was detected in seismic and infrasound data later on 13 June (event 50), with no detected ash cloud.
"There was an 11-day pause in detected explosive activity from June 13-24. During an overflight on June 22, sediment-laden water was visible in the open vent lagoon area, and the area of persistent steaming was visible just east of the December uplift area (Fig. 5c).
"Twelve explosive events occurred from June 24 to July 11 (events 51-62). These were generally short-duration, detected in seismic and infrasound data, and produced little or no lightning (Table 1). Several of these events were closely spaced groups of smaller events. A photo taken on July 3 shows the area of persistent steaming visible from behind the December uplifted block, but no activity at other areas of the island (Fig. 5d).
"Following an almost month-long pause, explosive activity resumed on August 7, with a 2-h long sequence (event 63; Table 1). Detected in seismic, infrasound, satellite, and lightning data, event 63 was longer lived than many of the events in the eruptive sequence and satellite images showed that ash from the eruption formed a continuous cloud that was carried by strong winds south over Umnak Island and then out over
the Pacific Ocean reaching an altitude of 10-12 km asl (Schneider et al. 2019). Event 63 produced one of the largest SO2 masses of the eruption, 5.8 kt, as determined by IASI satellite (Lopez et al. 2019). It also yielded the highest number of lightning strokes during the second half of the eruption (117; Van Eaton et al. 2019).
"As shown in aWorldview-2 image from August 8 (Fig. 6j), event 63 produced significant proximal tephra that expanded Bogoslof Island’s northern coastline and closed off the northfacing lagoon to create a crater lake in the vent region, perhaps even leading to a subaerial vent for some portion of this explosive event. This image also shows a large number of new ballistic blocks, primarily in the east-southeast sector of the island (Waythomas et al. 2019a, their Fig. 18). In infrasound data, event 63 shows a progression from low to high FI, consistent with a shift from submarine to subaerial venting (Fee et al. 2019).
"The final 2 weeks of the eruption were marked by mostly short-duration explosions and concurrent growth of a lava dome. Events 64 through 70 were mostly short-lived (6 min or less, except event 70 which lasted 59 min; Table 1), produced little or no lightning (Van Eaton et al. 2019), and modest SO2 (up to1.2 kt; Lopez et al. 2019). Volcanic clouds from the explosions rose to high altitudes (up to 8.7 km asl; Schneider et al. 2019) despite their short durations.
"A high-resolution Worldview-3 image on August 13 shows a vent region filled with seawater and no lava dome was apparent (Fig. 6k). On August 15, repeating low-frequency seismic events from Bogoslof were detected on Okmok and Makushin networks for about 8 h (Tepp et al. 2019). A photo from an overflight of the volcano on August 15 shows the area of persistent steaming visible since late May, but nothing at the site of the dome that would appear days later in the vent lagoon (Fig. 5e). If the August 15 seismicity was related to magma ascent, it had not yet risen shallowly enough to impact the vent lagoon area.
"A new lava dome was observed in data derived from US National Imagery Systems in the enclosed, water-filled crater on August 18 and grew to about 160 m in diameter and 20 m tall by August 22. A Sentinel SAR view shows the dome on August 20 (Fig. 7d). An oblique aerial photo taken on August 26 shows a vigorous steam plume that likely was generated as hot dome rock interacted with seawater in the vent lagoon area (Fig. 5f).
"SAR images from Sentinel-1 (Fig. 7e) and Cosmos SkyMed (Fig. 7f) on August 27, after event 66, suggest that most of this dome had been removed, with only some northern dome edge remnants remaining. The low-frequency infrasound associated with events 66-69 suggest that the vent was below water (Fee et al. 2019).
"Following the last explosive activity on August 30, there were a few earthquakes detected in seismic and hydrophone data (G. Tepp, written comm. 2019), but seismic activity quieted soon after. In August 2018, AVO added a telemetered seismometer on Bogoslof Island, which has recorded little activity of note.
"Weakly elevated surface temperatures were consistently observed at Bogoslof in low-resolution satellite images through November 2017. High-resolution satellite images from the fall of 2017 show steaming and discoloration on the island (e.g., Fig. 6l). As of 2019, continued erosion has changed the shape of the island (Waythomas et al. 2019b), similar to what occurred following previous eruptions."

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Bogoslof unrest 2023

October 24, 2023 — November 24, 2023

On October 24, 2023, AVO raised the Aviation Color Code and Volcano Alert Level for Bogoslof to YELLOW/ADVISORY, stating:
"Over the past three days, over 90 earthquakes have been detected in the vicinity of Bogoslof volcano. This marks a change in behavior and the Aviation Color Code and Volcano Alert Level is being increased to YELLOW/ADVISORY. Increases in seismic activity typically precede eruptions, but many volcanoes have exhibited similar behavior that did not result in eruptions. There have been no other signs of unrest observed in satellite data over the past several days."
Seismicity levels at Bogoslof gradually declined over the next month, and no other signs of unrest were observed. On November 24, 2024, AVO returned the alert levels to UNASSIGNED, stating that activity had returned to background levels.

Bogoslof 1796/5

Bogoslof 1806

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Bogoslof 1913/7

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Bogoslof 1931/10

Bogoslof 1951/9

Bogoslof 1992/7

Bogoslof 2016/12

Bogoslof unrest 2023

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5 Event Date(s)

Past Activity Legend:
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Map Images


Map References


Recently active volcanoes of Alaska, 2023

Cameron, C.E., Bull, K.F., and Macpherson, A.E., 2023, Recently active volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 133 v. 6, 2 sheets. https://doi.org/10.14509/31086.

Historically active volcanoes of Alaska, v. 3, 2018

Cameron, C.E., Schaefer, J.R., and Mulliken, K.M., 2018, Historically active volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 133 v. 3, 2 sheets. Http://doi.org/10.14509/30142

Historically active volcanoes of Alaska, 2014

Schaefer, J.R., Cameron, C.E., and Nye, C.J., 2014, Historically active volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 133 v. 1.2, 1 sheet, scale 1:3,000,000. This publication has been superseded. Newest version available at http://www.dggs.alaska.gov/pubs/id/20181 .

Geologic map of the Katmai volcanic cluster, Katmai National Park, Alaska, 2003

Hildreth, Wes, and Fierstein, Judy, 2003, Geologic map of the Katmai volcanic cluster, Katmai National Park, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigation Series Map I 2778, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:63,360.
full-text PDF 23.9 MB
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Preliminary volcano-hazard assessment for the Katmai volcanic cluster, Alaska, 2001

Fierstein, Judy, and Hildreth, Wes, 2001, Preliminary volcano-hazard assessment for the Katmai volcanic cluster, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 00-0489, 50 p., 1 plate, scale not applicable.
full-text PDF 28.8 MB
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Volcanoes of Alaska, 1998

Nye, C. J., Queen, Katherine, and McCarthy, A. M., 1998, Volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Information Circular IC 0038, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:4,000,000, available at http://www.dggs.dnr.state.ak.us/pubs/pubs?reqtype=citation&ID=7043 .
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Volcanoes of Alaska, 1995

Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys, 1995, Volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Information Circular IC 0038, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:4,000,000.

Geologic map of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska, 1994

Riehle, J. R., Detterman, R. L., Yount, M. E., and Miller, J. W., 1994, Geologic map of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I 2204, unpaged, 1 plate, scale 1:250,000.

Geothermal resources of the Aleutian Arc, 1993

Motyka, R. J., Liss, S. A., Nye, C. J., and Moorman, M. A., 1993, Geothermal resources of the Aleutian Arc: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Professional Report PR 0114, 17 p., 4 sheets, scale 1:1,000,000.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Quaternary geologic map of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska, 1993

Riehle, J. R., and Detterman, R. L., 1993, Quaternary geologic map of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I 2032, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:250,000.

Holocene volcanoes of the Aleutian Arc, Alaska, 1993

March, G. D., 1993, Holocene volcanoes of the Aleutian Arc, Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Public-Data File PDF 93-85, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:2,000,000.

Map showing potassium-argon ages from the Mount Katmai and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula, Alaska, 1992

Shew, Nora, and Lanphere, M. A., 1992, Map showing potassium-argon ages from the Mount Katmai and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Field Studies Map MF 2021-E, unpaged, 1sheet, scale 1:250,000.

Preliminary geologic map of the Mt. Katmai quadrangle and portions of the Afognak and Naknek quadrangles, Alaska, 1987

Riehle, J. R., Detterman, R. L., Yount, M. E., and Miller, J. W., 1987, Preliminary geologic map of the Mt. Katmai quadrangle and portions of the Afognak and Naknek quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 87-0593, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:250,000.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Map showing distribution, composition, and age of Late Cenozoic volcanic centers in Alaska, 1986

Luedke, R. G., and Smith, R. L., 1986, Map showing distribution, composition, and age of Late Cenozoic volcanic centers in Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I 1091-F, unpaged, 3 sheets, scale 1:1,000,000.

Eruption of Trident Volcano, Katmai National Monument, Alaska, Feb.-June 1953, 1954

Snyder, G. L., 1954, Eruption of Trident Volcano, Katmai National Monument, Alaska, Feb.-June 1953: U.S. Geological Survey Circular C 0318, 7 p., 2 sheets, scale unknown.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

References

Proximity to active volcanoes enhances glacier velocity, 2024

Mallalieu, J., Barr, I.D., Spagnolo, M., Mullan, D.J., Symeonakis, E., Edwards, B.R., and Martin, M.D., 2024, Proximity to active volcanoes enhances glacier velocity: Communications Earth & Environment v. 5, 679. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01826-5
Full-text PDF 1.3 MB

Recently active volcanoes of Alaska, 2023

Cameron, C.E., Bull, K.F., and Macpherson, A.E., 2023, Recently active volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 133 v. 6, 2 sheets. https://doi.org/10.14509/31086.

Interconnection of magma sources beneath the Katmai volcanic system inferred from seismic tomography and petrology, 2023

Koulakov, I., Izbekov, P., Eichelberger, J., Al Arifi, N., and Qaysi, S.I., 2023, Interconnection of magma sources beneath the Katmai volcanic system inferred from seismic tomography and petrology: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research v. 434, 107744. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2023.107744.

Understanding drivers of mercury in lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush), a top-predator fish in southwest Alaska's parklands, 2023

Bartz, K.K., Hannam, M.P., Wilson, T.L., Lepak, R.F., Ogorek, J.M., Young, D.B., Eagles-Smith, C.A., and Krabbenhoft, D.P., 2023, Understanding drivers of mercury in lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush), a top-predator fish in southwest Alaska's parklands: Environmental Pollution v. 330, 121678. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2023.121678
Full-text PDF 3.8 MB

Alaska interagency operating plan for volcanic ash episodes, 2022

Alaska Volcano Observatory, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Weather Service, Federal Aviation Administration, Department of Defense, United States Coast Guard, Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, and Alaska Department of Health and Social Services (participating agencies), 2022, Alaska interagency operating plan for volcanic ash episodes, 85 p.

Geologic database of information on volcanoes in Alaska (GeoDIVA), 2022

Cameron, C.E., Crass, S.W., and AVO Staff, eds, 2022, Geologic database of information on volcanoes in Alaska (GeoDIVA): Alaska Division of Geologic and Geophysical Surveys Digital Data Series 20, https://doi.org/10.14509/geodiva, https://doi.org/10.14509/30901.

Ambient noise tomography of the Katmai volcanic area, Alaska, 2021

Bai, Tong, Nayak, Avinash, Thurber, Clifford, Zeng, Xiangfang, and Haney, Mathew, 2021, Ambient noise tomography of the Katmai volcanic area, Alaska: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 419, article no. 107373, 10 p., doi:10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2021.107373.

Historically active volcanoes of Alaska, v. 4, 2020

Cameron, C.E., Schaefer, J.R., and Ekberg, P.G., 2020, Historically active volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 133 v. 4, 2 sheets. Http://doi.org/10.14509/30426

Catalog of earthquake parameters and description of seismograph and infrasound stations at Alaskan volcanoes - January 1, 2013, through December 31, 2017, 2019

Dixon, J.P., Stihler S.D., Haney, M.M., Lyons, J.J., Ketner, D.M., Mulliken, K.M., Parker, T., and Power, J.A., 2019, Catalog of earthquake parameters and description of seismograph and infrasound stations at Alaskan volcanoes - January 1, 2013, through December 31, 2017: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 1115, 92 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/ds1115.

A unified catalog of earthquake hypocenters and magnitudes at volcanoes in Alaska: 1989 to 2018, 2019

Power, J.A., Friberg, P.A., Haney, M.M., Parker, T., Stihler, S.D., and Dixon, J.P., 2019, A unified catalog of earthquake hypocenters and magnitudes at volcanoes in Alaska—1989 to 2018: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2019–5037, 17 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/sir20195037.

2018 update to the U.S. Geological Survey national volcanic threat assessment, 2018

Ewert, J.W., Diefenbach, A.K., and Ramsey, D.W., 2018, 2018 update to the U.S. Geological Survey national volcanic threat assessment: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5140, 40 p., https://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2018/5140/sir20185140.pdf.

Historically active volcanoes of Alaska, v. 3, 2018

Cameron, C.E., Schaefer, J.R., and Mulliken, K.M., 2018, Historically active volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 133 v. 3, 2 sheets. Http://doi.org/10.14509/30142

Historically active volcanoes of Alaska, 2016

Cameron, C.E., and Schaefer, J.R., 2016, Historically active volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 133 v. 2, 1 sheet, scale 1:3,000,000. http://doi.org/10.14509/20181

Historically active volcanoes of Alaska, 2014

Schaefer, J.R., Cameron, C.E., and Nye, C.J., 2014, Historically active volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 133 v. 1.2, 1 sheet, scale 1:3,000,000. This publication has been superseded. Newest version available at http://www.dggs.alaska.gov/pubs/id/20181 .

Regional controls on volcano seismicity along the Aleutian Arc, 2014

Buurman, Helena, Nye, C.J., West, M.E., and Cameron, Cheryl, 2014, Regional controls on volcano seismicity along the Aleutian Arc: Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, doi:10.1002/2013GC005101

Three-dimensional seismic velocity structure and earthquake relocations at Katmai, Alaska, 2014

Murphy, Rachel, Thurber, Clifford, Prejean, Stephanie, and Bennington, Ninfa, 2014, Three-dimensional seismic velocity structure and earthquake relocations at Katmai, Alaska: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 276, p. 121-131, doi:10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2014.02.22

Preliminary database of Quaternary vents in Alaska, 2014

Cameron, C.E., and Nye, C.J., 2014, Preliminary database of Quaternary vents in Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication 153, 11 p., doi:10.14509/27357 .

InSAR imaging of Aleutian volcanoes, 2014

Lu, Zhong, and Dzurisin, Daniel, 2014, InSAR imaging of Aleutian volcanoes: Chichester, UK, Springer-Praxis, 390 p.

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2012, 2013

Dixon, J.P., Stihler, S.D, Power, J.A., Haney, Matt, Parker, Tom, Searcy, C.K., and Prejean, Stephanie, 2013, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2012: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 789, 84 p., available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/789/ .
full-text pdf 6.5 MB

Katmai scientific studies, 2012

Winfree, Robert, with contributions from Bacon, C.R., Bennett, A.J., Bennington, Ninfa, Berg, E.E., Brooks, Margi, Coletti, H.A., Coombs, M.L., Fierstein, Judy, Freeburg, Gary, Frost, G.V., Haney, Matthew, Jorgenson, M.T., Miller, A.E., Moran, Seth, Murphy, Rachel, Partnow, Patricia, Paskievitch, John, Stevens, D.P., Powell, Lee, Power, John, Prejean, S.G., Schaaf, Jeanne, Sherriff, R.L., Thurber, Clifford, and Welchman, R.A., 2012, Katmai science studies: Alaska Park Science Journal, v. 11, n. 1, 96 p., available online at http://www.nps.gov/akso/nature/science/ak_park_science/volume_11_issue_1.cfm .

Katmai National Park volcanoes, 2012

Fierstein, Judy, 2012, Katmai National Park volcanoes: in Winfree, Robert (project lead), Katmai Science Studies: Alaska Park Science Journal, v. 11, n. 1, p. 14-21, available online at http://www.nps.gov/akso/nature/science/ak_park_science/volume_11_issue_1.cfm .
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Earthquake studies reveal the magmatic plumbing system of the Katmai volcanoes, 2012

Thurber, Clifford, Murphy, Rachel, Prejean, Stephanie, Haney, Matthew, Bennington, Ninfa, Powell, Lee, and Paskievitch, John, 2012: Earthquake studies reveal the magmatic plumbing system of the Katmai volcanoes: in Winfree, Robert (project lead), Katmai Science Studies: Alaska Park Science Journal, v. 11, n. 1, p. 34-39, available online at http://www.nps.gov/akso/nature/science/ak_park_science/volume_11_issue_1.cfm .
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Volcanic earthquakes in Alaska's National Parks, 2012

Prejean, Stephanie, Moran, Seth, and Power, John, 2012, Volcanic earthquakes in Alaska's National Parks: in Winfree, Robert (project lead), Katmai Science Studies: Alaska Park Science Journal, v. 11, n. 1, p. 40-45, available online at http://www.nps.gov/akso/nature/science/ak_park_science/volume_11_issue_1.cfm .
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2011, 2012

Dixon, J.P., Stihler, S.D., Power, J.A., and Searcy, C.K., 2012, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2011: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 730, 82 p., available online at http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/730/pdf/ds730.pdf .

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2010, 2011

Dixon, J.P., Stihler, S.D., Power, J.A., and Searcy, C.K., 2011, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2010: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 645, 82 p., available online at http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/645/

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2009, 2010

Dixon, J.P., Stihler, S.D., Power, J.A., and Searcy, C.K., 2010, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2009: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 531, 84 p., available online at http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/531/ .

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2008, 2009

Dixon, J.P., and Stihler, S.D., 2009, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2008: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 467, 88 p., available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/467/ .

Historically active volcanoes of Alaska reference deck, 2009

Snedigar, S.F., and Cameron, C.C., 2009, Historically active volcanoes of Alaska reference deck: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Information Circular 59, 52 p, available to order from http://www.dggs.dnr.state.ak.us/pubs/pubs?reqtype=citation&ID=20401 .

Preliminary spreadsheet of eruption source parameters for volcanoes of the world, 2009

Mastin, L.G., Guffanti, Marianne, Ewert, J.E., and Spiegel, Jessica, 2009, Preliminary spreadsheet of eruption source parameters for volcanoes of the world: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2009-1133, v. 1.2, 25 p., available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2009/1133/ .

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2006, 2008

Dixon, J.P., Stihler, S.D., Power, J.A., and Searcy, Cheryl, 2008, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2006: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 326, 79 p., available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/326/ .

The Alaska Volcano Observatory - 20 years of volcano research, monitoring, and eruption response, 2008

Schaefer, J.R., and Nye, Chris, 2008, The Alaska Volcano Observatory - 20 years of volcano research, monitoring, and eruption response: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys, Alaska GeoSurvey News, NL 2008-001, v. 11, n. 1, p. 1-9, available at http://wwwdggs.dnr.state.ak.us/pubs/pubs?reqtype=citation&ID=16061 .

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2007, 2008

Dixon, J.P., Stihler, S.D. and Power, J.A., 2008, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2007: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 367, 82 p., available online at http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/367/ .

Three-dimensional P-wave velocity structure derived from local earthquakes at the Katmai group of volcanoes, Alaska, 2007

Jolly, A.D., Moran, S.C., McNutt, S.R., and Stone, D.B., 2007, Three-dimensional P-wave velocity structure derived from local earthquakes at the Katmai group of volcanoes, Alaska: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 159, p. 326-342, doi:10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2006.06.022.

Explosive eruptive record in the Katmai region, Alaska Peninsula: an overview, 2007

Fierstein, Judy, 2007, Explosive eruptive record in the Katmai region, Alaska Peninsula: an overview: Bulletin of Volcanology, v. 69, n. 5, p. 469-509, doi:10.1007/s00445-006-0097-y.

System for ranking relative threats of U.S. volcanoes, 2007

Ewert, John, 2007, System for ranking relative threats of U.S. volcanoes: Natural Hazards Review, v. 8, n. 4, p. 112-124.

A compilation of gas emission-rate data from volcanoes of Cook Inlet (Spurr, Crater Peak, Redoubt, Iliamna, and Augustine) and Alaska Peninsula (Douglas, Fourpeaked, Griggs, Mageik, Martin, Peulik, Ukinrek Maars, and Veniaminof), Alaska, from 1995-2006, 2007

Doukas, M.P., and McGee, K.A., 2007, A compilation of gas emission-rate data from volcanoes of Cook Inlet (Spurr, Crater Peak, Redoubt, Iliamna, and Augustine) and Alaska Peninsula (Douglas, Fourpeaked, Griggs, Mageik, Martin, Peulik, Ukinrek Maars, and Veniaminof), Alaska, from 1995-2006: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2007-1400, 13 p., available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2007/1400/ .

Analyses of unusual long-period earthquakes with extended coda recorded at Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA, 2006

De Angelis, Silvio, 2006, Analyses of unusual long-period earthquakes with extended coda recorded at Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA: Geophysical Research Letters, v. 33, 4 p., doi:10.1029/2005GL025581.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2005, 2006

Dixon, J.P., Stihler, S.D., Power, J.A., Tytgat, Guy, Estes, Steve, and McNutt, S.R., 2006, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2005: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2006-1264, 78 p., available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2006/1264/ .

March-April 2004, 2005

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2005, March-April 2004: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v.16, n. 2, unpaged.

May-June 2004, 2005

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2005, May-June 2004: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 16, n. 3, unpaged.

July-August 2004, 2005

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2005, July-August 2004: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 16, n. 4, unpaged.

September-October 2004, 2005

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2005, September-October 2004: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 16, n. 5, unpaged.

An assessment of volcanic threat and monitoring capabilities in the United States: framework for a National Volcano Early Warning System NVEWS, 2005

Ewert, J.W., Guffanti, Marianne, and Murray, T.L., 2005, An assessment of volcanic threat and monitoring capabilities in the United States: framework for a National Volcano Early Warning System NVEWS: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2005-1164, 62 p.
full-text PDF 2.90 MB

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2004, 2005

Dixon, J.P., Stihler, S.D., Power, J.A., Tytgat, Guy, Estes, Steve, Prejean, Stephanie, Sanchez, J.J., Sanches, Rebecca, McNutt, S.R., and Paskievitch, John, 2005, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2004: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2005-1312, 74 p., available online at http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1312/.

July-August 2001, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, July-August 2001: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 13, n. 4, unpaged.

September-October 2001, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, September-October 2001: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 13, n. 5, unpaged.

November-December 2001, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, November-December 2001: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 13, n. 6, unpaged.

January-February 2002, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, January-February 2002: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 14, n. 1, unpaged.

March-April 2002, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, March-April 2002: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 14, n. 2, unpaged.

May-June 2002, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, May-June 2002: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 14, n. 3, unpaged.

July-August 2002, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, July-August 2002: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 14, n. 4, unpaged.

September-October 2002, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, September-October 2002: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 14, n. 5, unpaged.

November-December 2002, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, November-December 2002: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 14, n. 6, unpaged.

January-February 2003, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, January-February 2003: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 15, n. 1, unpaged.

March-April 2003, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, March-April 2003: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 15, n. 2, unpaged.

May-June 2003, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, May-June 2003: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 15, n. 3, unpaged.

September-October 2003, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, September-October 2003: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 15, n. 5, unpaged.

July-August 2003, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, July-August 2003: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 15, n. 4, unpaged.

Rear-arc vs. arc-front volcanoes in the Katmai reach of the Alaska Peninsula: a critical apprasial of across-arc compositional variation, 2004

Hildreth, Wes, Fierstein, Judy, Siems, D. F., Budahn, J. R., and Ruiz, Joaquin, 2004, Rear-arc vs. arc-front volcanoes in the Katmai reach of the Alaska Peninsula: a critical apprasial of across-arc compositional variation: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, v. 147, n. 3, p. 243-275.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2003, 2004

Dixon, J. P., Stihler, S. D., Power, J. A., Tytgat, Guy, Moran, S. C., Sanchez, J. J., McNutt, S. R., Estes, Steve, and Paskievitch, John, 2004, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2003: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2004-1234, 69 p.
full-text PDF 12.3 MB

Observations of deep long-period (DLP) seismic events beneath Aleutian Arc volcanoes: 1989-2002, 2004

Power, J.A, Stihler, S.D., White, R.A., and Moran, S.C., 2004, Observations of deep long-period (DLP) seismic events beneath Aleutian Arc volcanoes: 1989-2002: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 138, p. 243-266.

January-February 2004, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, January-February 2004: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 16, n. 1, unpaged.

November-December 2003, 2004

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2004, November-December 2003: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 15, n. 6, unpaged.

Volcanoes of the world: an illustrated catalog of Holocene volcanoes and their eruptions, 2003

Siebert, L., and Simkin, T., 2002-, Volcanoes of the world: an illustrated catalog of Holocene volcanoes and their eruptions: Smithsonian Institution, Global Volcanism Program Digital Information Series GVP-3, http://volcano.si.edu/search_volcano.cfm, unpaged internet resource.

Bibliography of information on Alaska volcanoes, 2003

Cameron, C. E., Triplehorn, J. H., and Robar, C. L., 2003, Bibliography of information on Alaska volcanoes: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Miscellaneous Publication MP 131, 1 CD-ROM.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2002, 2003

Dixon, J. P., Stihler, S. D., Power, J. A., Tytgat, Guy, Moran, S. C., Sanchez, John, Estes, Steve, McNutt, S. R., and Paskievitch, John, 2003, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1 through December 31, 2002: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 03-0267, 58 p.
full-text PDF 7.3 MB

Geochronology and eruptive history of the Katmai volcanic cluster, Alaska Peninsula, 2003

Hildreth, Wes, Lanphere, M. A., and Fierstein, Judy, 2003, Geochronology and eruptive history of the Katmai volcanic cluster, Alaska Peninsula: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, v. 214, n. 1-2, p. 93-114.
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Geologic map of the Katmai volcanic cluster, Katmai National Park, Alaska, 2003

Hildreth, Wes, and Fierstein, Judy, 2003, Geologic map of the Katmai volcanic cluster, Katmai National Park, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigation Series Map I 2778, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:63,360.
full-text PDF 23.9 MB
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Station corrections for the Katmai Region Seismic Network, 2003

Searcy, C. K., 2003, Station corrections for the Katmai Region Seismic Network: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 03-0403, 14 p.
full-text PDF 1.5 MB

Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1, 2000 through December 31, 2001, 2002

Dixon, J. P., Stihler, S. D., Power, J. A., Tytgat, Guy, Estes, Steve, Moran, S. C., Paskievitch, John, and McNutt, S. R., 2002, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1, 2000 through December 31, 2001: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 02-0342, 56 p.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

The great eruption of 1912, 2002

Adleman, Jennifer, 2002, The great eruption of 1912: National Park Service Alaska Park Science Winter 2002, Anchorage, AK, http://www.arlis.org/docs/vol1/52558645/52558645v1no1.pdf , p. 4-11.
full-text PDF 1.6 MB
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Mount Griggs: A compositionally distinctive Quaternary stratovolcano behind the main volcanic line in Katmai National Park, 2002

Hildreth, Wes, Fierstein, Judy, Lanphere, M. A., and Siems, D. F., 2002, Mount Griggs: A compositionally distinctive Quaternary stratovolcano behind the main volcanic line in Katmai National Park: in Wilson, F. H. and Galloway, J. P., (eds.), Studies by the U.S. Geological Survey in Alaska, 2000, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper PP 1662, p. 87-112.
full-text PDF 3.2 MB
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Katmai geology guide, 2002

Riehle, Jim, 2002, Katmai geology guide: Publication Consultants, 112 p.

Seismic response of the Katmai Volcanoes to the 6 December 1999 magnitude 7.0 Karluk Lake Earthquake, Alaska, 2001

Power, J. A., Moran, S. C., McNutt, S. R., Stihler, S. D., and Sanchez, J. J., 2001, Seismic response of the Katmai Volcanoes to the 6 December 1999 magnitude 7.0 Karluk Lake Earthquake, Alaska: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, v. 91, n. 1, p. 57-63.
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Preliminary volcano-hazard assessment for the Katmai volcanic cluster, Alaska, 2001

Fierstein, Judy, and Hildreth, Wes, 2001, Preliminary volcano-hazard assessment for the Katmai volcanic cluster, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 00-0489, 50 p., 1 plate, scale not applicable.
full-text PDF 28.8 MB
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Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1, 1994 through December 31, 1999, 2001

Jolly, A. D., Stihler, S. D., Power, J. A., Lahr, J. C., Paskievitch, John, Tytgat, Guy, Estes, Steve, Lockheart, A. D., Moran, S. C., McNutt, S. R., and Hammond, W. R., 2001, Catalog of earthquake hypocenters at Alaskan volcanoes: January 1, 1994 through December 31, 1999: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 01-0189, 22 p.
full-text PDF 552 KB
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Volcanoes in America's national parks, 2001

Decker, R. W., and Decker, Barbara, 2001, Volcanoes in America's national parks: New York, Odyssey Publications, 256 p.

Subsurface structure of the volcanoes in Katmai National Park, Alaska, 2000

Jolly, A. D., 2000, Subsurface structure of the volcanoes in Katmai National Park, Alaska: University of Alaska Fairbanks unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Fairbanks, Alaska, 169 p.

Katmai volcanic cluster and the great eruption of 1912, 2000

Hildreth, Wes, and Fierstein, Judy, 2000, Katmai volcanic cluster and the great eruption of 1912: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 112, n. 10, p. 1594-1620, 6 sheets, scale unknown.
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Tephrochronology of the Brooks River Archaeological District, Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska: what can and cannot be done with tephra deposits, 2000

Riehle, J. R., Dumond, D. E., Meyer, C. E., and Schaaf, J. M., 2000, Tephrochronology of the Brooks River Archaeological District, Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska: what can and cannot be done with tephra deposits: in McGuire, W. J., Griffiths, D. R., Hancock, P. L., and Stewart, I. S., (eds.), The archaeology of geological catastrophes, Geological Society, London Special Publication 171, p. 245-266.

January-February 2000, 2000

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 2000, January-February 2000: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 12, n. 1, 28 p.
Part 1 PDF 239 KB
Part 2 PDF 916 KB
Part 3 PDF 469 KB

Three-dimensional attenuation structure at the volcanoes of Katmai National Park, Alaska Peninsula, Alaska, 2000

Jolly, A. D., and McNutt, S. R., 2000, Three-dimensional attenuation structure at the volcanoes of Katmai National Park, Alaska Peninsula, Alaska [abs.]: Eos, v. 81, n. 48, p. 1375.

Volcano-tectonic earthquakes at Katmai National Park, Alaska: evidence for more than one source process, 2000

Moran, S. C., 2000, Volcano-tectonic earthquakes at Katmai National Park, Alaska: evidence for more than one source process [abs.]: Eos, v. 81, n. 48, p. 1375.

Seismicity at the volcanoes of Katmai National Park, Alaska: July 1995-December 1997, 1999

Jolly, A. D., and McNutt, S. R., 1999, Seismicity at the volcanoes of Katmai National Park, Alaska: July 1995-December 1997: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 93, n. 3, p. 173-190.
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Data on Holocene tephra (volcanic ash) deposits in the Alaska Peninsula and lower Cook Inlet region of the Aleutian volcanic arc, Alaska, 1999

Riehle, J. R., Meyer, C. E., and Miyaoka, R. T., 1999, Data on Holocene tephra (volcanic ash) deposits in the Alaska Peninsula and lower Cook Inlet region of the Aleutian volcanic arc, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 99-0135, 5 p.
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September-December 1999, 1999

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 1999, September-December 1999: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 11, n. 5 and 6, 51 p.
Part 1 PDF 425 KB
Part 2 PDF 1.7 MB
Part 3 PDF 549 KB

Synthetic aperture radar interferometry coherence analysis over Katmai volcano group, Alaska, 1998

Lu, Z., and Freymueller, J. T., 1998, Synthetic aperture radar interferometry coherence analysis over Katmai volcano group, Alaska: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 103, n. B12, p. 29,887-29,894.

Volcanoes of Alaska, 1998

Nye, C. J., Queen, Katherine, and McCarthy, A. M., 1998, Volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Information Circular IC 0038, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:4,000,000, available at http://www.dggs.dnr.state.ak.us/pubs/pubs?reqtype=citation&ID=7043 .
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January-April 1998, 1998

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 1998, January-April 1998: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 10, n. 1 and 2, 35 p.
Part 1 PDF 147 KB
Part 2 382 KB
Part 3 PDF 375 KB

Seismicity in the vicinity of the Katmai Group of volcanoes, Katmai National Park, Alaska: July 1995-March 1997, 1997

Jolly, A. D., McNutt, S. R., Coombs, M. L., Stihler, S. D., and Paskievitch, J. F., 1997, Seismicity in the vicinity of the Katmai Group of volcanoes, Katmai National Park, Alaska: July 1995-March 1997 [abs.]: Eos, v. 78, n. 46, p. 442.

Volcanoes of the Alaska Peninsula and Aleutian Islands selected photographs, 1997

Neal, Christina, and McGimsey, R. G., 1997, Volcanoes of the Alaska Peninsula and Aleutian Islands selected photographs: U.S. Geological Survey Digital Data Series DDS 0040, 1 CD-ROM.

July-August 1997, 1997

Alaska Volcano Observatory, 1997, July-August 1997: Alaska Volcano Observatory Bimonthly Report, v. 9, n. 4, 31 p.
Part 1 PDF 446 KB
Part 2 PDF 435 KB
Part 3 PDF 2 MB

ERS-1 and ERS-2 satellite interferometry at Katmai National Park, Alaska, 1996

Lu, Z., Freymueller, J., Eichelberger, J., and Fatland, R., 1996, ERS-1 and ERS-2 satellite interferometry at Katmai National Park, Alaska [abs.]: Eos, v. 77, n. 46, p. F50.

Stratigraphic framework of the Alaska Peninsula, 1996

Detterman, R. L., Case, J. E., Miller, J. W., Wilson, F. H., and Yount, M. E., 1996, Stratigraphic framework of the Alaska Peninsula: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1969-A, 74 p.
full-text PDF 2.7 MB

Volcanoes of Alaska, 1995

Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys, 1995, Volcanoes of Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Information Circular IC 0038, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:4,000,000.

Mesozoic macrofossil locality map, checklists, and pre-Quaternary stratigraphic section of the Mt. Katmai and adjacent parts of the Afognak and Naknek quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula, Alaska, 1995

Miller, J.W., Elder, W.P., and Detterman, R.L., 1995, Mesozoic macrofossil locality map, checklists, and pre-Quaternary stratigraphic section of the Mt. Katmai and adjacent parts of the Afognak and Naknek quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 2021-G, 3 sheets. https://doi.org/10.3133/mf2021G

Geologic map of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska, 1994

Riehle, J. R., Detterman, R. L., Yount, M. E., and Miller, J. W., 1994, Geologic map of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I 2204, unpaged, 1 plate, scale 1:250,000.

Mineral-resource assessments in Alaska: background information to accompany maps and reports about geology and undiscovered-mineral-resource potential of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula, 1994

Riehle, J. R., Church, S. E., Detterman, R. L., and Miller, J. W., 1994, Mineral-resource assessments in Alaska: background information to accompany maps and reports about geology and undiscovered-mineral-resource potential of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula: U.S. Geological Survey Circular C 1106, 13 p.

Volcanoes of the world [2nd edition], 1994

Simkin, Tom, and Siebert, Lee, 1994, Volcanoes of the world [2nd edition]: Tucson, Arizona, Geoscience Press, 349 p.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Quaternary volcanism in the Alaska Peninsula and Wrangell Mountains, Alaska, 1994

Miller, T. P., and Richter, D. H., 1994, Quaternary volcanism in the Alaska Peninsula and Wrangell Mountains, Alaska: in Plafker, George, Jones, D. L., and Berg, H. C., (eds.), The Geology of Alaska, Geological Society of America The Geology of North America series v. G-1, p. 759-779.
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Gas compositions from fumaroles in Katmai National Park volcanoes and in the 1912 ash flow sheet, 1993

Sheppard, D. S., Janik, C. J., and Keith, T. E. C., 1993, Gas compositions from fumaroles in Katmai National Park volcanoes and in the 1912 ash flow sheet [abs.]: in Duggan, M. B. and Knutson, Jan, (comps.), Ancient volcanism & modern analogues, 1993 IAVCEI general assembly, Abstracts, Canberra, Australia, Sept. 25-Oct. 1, 1993, p. 99.

Geothermal resources of the Aleutian Arc, 1993

Motyka, R. J., Liss, S. A., Nye, C. J., and Moorman, M. A., 1993, Geothermal resources of the Aleutian Arc: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Professional Report PR 0114, 17 p., 4 sheets, scale 1:1,000,000.
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Quaternary geologic map of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska, 1993

Riehle, J. R., and Detterman, R. L., 1993, Quaternary geologic map of the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I 2032, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:250,000.

Evidence for a copper-bearing fluid in magma erupted at the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, Alaska, 1993

Lowenstern, J. B., 1993, Evidence for a copper-bearing fluid in magma erupted at the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, Alaska: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, v. 114, n. 3, p. 409-421.

Holocene volcanoes of the Aleutian Arc, Alaska, 1993

March, G. D., 1993, Holocene volcanoes of the Aleutian Arc, Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys Public-Data File PDF 93-85, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:2,000,000.

Under the volcano: beneath the mountains of Alaska, slowly cooling rocks lie at the heart of a volcano. To reveal their secrets, geologists want to drill a borehole in a pristine and beautiful national park, 1992

Papike, James, and Eichelberger, John, 1992, Under the volcano: beneath the mountains of Alaska, slowly cooling rocks lie at the heart of a volcano. To reveal their secrets, geologists want to drill a borehole in a pristine and beautiful national park: New Scientist, v. 135, n. 1829, p. 34-37.

A comparison of gas geochemistry of fumaroles in the 1912 ash-flow sheet and on active stratovolcanoes, Katmai National Park, Alaska, 1992

Sheppard, D. S., Janik, C. J., and Keith, T. E. C., 1992, A comparison of gas geochemistry of fumaroles in the 1912 ash-flow sheet and on active stratovolcanoes, Katmai National Park, Alaska: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 53, n. 1, p. 185-198.
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Map showing potassium-argon ages from the Mount Katmai and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula, Alaska, 1992

Shew, Nora, and Lanphere, M. A., 1992, Map showing potassium-argon ages from the Mount Katmai and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Field Studies Map MF 2021-E, unpaged, 1sheet, scale 1:250,000.

Seismic evidence for magma in the vicinity of Mt. Katmai, Alaska, 1991

Ward, P. L., Pitt, A. M., and Endo, E., 1991, Seismic evidence for magma in the vicinity of Mt. Katmai, Alaska: Geophysical Research Letters, v. 18, n. 8, p. 1537-1540.
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Resource assessment of the Mount Katmai 1x2 deg quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula, 1991

Riehle, J. R., Church, S. E., and Magoon, L. B., 1991, Resource assessment of the Mount Katmai 1x2 deg quadrangle and adjacent parts of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska Peninsula [abs.]: in Good, E. G., Slack, J. F., and Kotra, R. K., (eds.), USGS Research on Mineral Resources-1991 Program and Abstracts, U.S. Geological Survey Circular C 1062, p. 65-66.

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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Katmai country, 1989

Rennick, Penny, 1989, Katmai country: Alaska Geographic, v. 16, n. 1, 95 p., 1 sheet, scale unknown.

Sample locality maps, analytical data, and statistical summary of analyses of rock samples from the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent portions of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska, 1989

Riehle, J. R., Bailey, R. A., and Church, S. E., 1989, Sample locality maps, analytical data, and statistical summary of analyses of rock samples from the Mount Katmai quadrangle and adjacent portions of the Naknek and Afognak quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 89-0570, 136 p.

New perspectives on the eruption on 1912 in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, Katmai National Park, Alaska, 1987

Hildreth, Wes, 1987, New perspectives on the eruption on 1912 in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, Katmai National Park, Alaska: Bulletin of Volcanology, v. 49, n. 5, p. 680-693.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Preliminary geologic map of the Mt. Katmai quadrangle and portions of the Afognak and Naknek quadrangles, Alaska, 1987

Riehle, J. R., Detterman, R. L., Yount, M. E., and Miller, J. W., 1987, Preliminary geologic map of the Mt. Katmai quadrangle and portions of the Afognak and Naknek quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 87-0593, unpaged, 1 sheet, scale 1:250,000.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Map showing distribution, composition, and age of Late Cenozoic volcanic centers in Alaska, 1986

Luedke, R. G., and Smith, R. L., 1986, Map showing distribution, composition, and age of Late Cenozoic volcanic centers in Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I 1091-F, unpaged, 3 sheets, scale 1:1,000,000.

Volcanism in the eastern Aleutian Arc: late Quaternary and Holocene centers, tectonic setting and petrology, 1983

Kienle, Juergen, and Swanson, S. E., 1983, Volcanism in the eastern Aleutian Arc: late Quaternary and Holocene centers, tectonic setting and petrology: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 17, n. 1-4, p. 393-432.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Plate subduction and volcanism in the eastern Aleutian Arc: 2, Petrology, 1982

Swanson, S. E., and Kienle, Juergen, 1982, Plate subduction and volcanism in the eastern Aleutian Arc: 2, Petrology [abs.]: Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America, v. 14, n. 7, p. 628.

Part I: The Mt. Edgecumbe volcanic field, Alaska: an example of tholeiitic and calc-alkaline volcanism, Part II: Characteristics of andesitic to dacitic volcanism at Katmai National Park, Alaska, 1981

Kosco, D. G., 1981, Part I: The Mt. Edgecumbe volcanic field, Alaska: an example of tholeiitic and calc-alkaline volcanism, Part II: Characteristics of andesitic to dacitic volcanism at Katmai National Park, Alaska: University of California, Berkeley unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, 249 p.

Helium isotope variations along the Alaskan-Aleutian Arc, 1981

Poreda, R., Craig, H., and Motyka, R., 1981, Helium isotope variations along the Alaskan-Aleutian Arc [abs.]: Eos, v. 62, n. 45, p. 1092.

Characteristics of andesitic to dacitic volcanism at Katmai National Park, Alaska, 1981

Kosco, D. G., 1981, Characteristics of andesitic to dacitic volcanism at Katmai National Park, Alaska [abs.]: Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America, v. 13, n. 7, p. 490.

Volcanic centers in the Katmai area, Alaska, 1981

Kienle, Juergen, Swanson, S. E., and Pulpan, Hans, 1981, Volcanic centers in the Katmai area, Alaska [abs.]: Eos, v. 62, n. 17, p. 430.

Volcanoes of the world, 1981

Simkin, Tom, Siebert, Lee, McClelland, Lindsay, Bridge, David, Newhall, Christopher, and Latter, J. H., 1981, Volcanoes of the world: Stroudsburg, PA, Hutchinson Publishing Company, 233 p.

Griggs, 1980

Staff, 1980, Griggs: in Annual report of the world volcanic eruptions in 1978, Bulletin of Volcanic Eruptions, v. 18, p. 85.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Katmai: the forge of Vulcan, 1979

Richter-McBride Productions, Alaska Natural History Association, and National Park Service, 1979, Katmai: the forge of Vulcan: 1 videocassette.

Volcanic gas studies at Alaskan volcanoes, 1979

Johnston, D. A., 1979, Volcanic gas studies at Alaskan volcanoes: in Johnson, K. M. and Williams, J. R., (eds.), The United States Geological Survey in Alaska: accomplishments during 1978, U.S. Geological Survey Circular C 0804-B, p. B83-B84.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Comprehensive tables giving physical data and thermal energy estimates for young igneous systems of the United States, 1978

Smith, R. L., Shaw, H. R., Luedke, R. G., and Russell, S. L., 1978, Comprehensive tables giving physical data and thermal energy estimates for young igneous systems of the United States: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 78-0925, p. 1-25.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC shelf

Exploring Katmai National Monument and the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, 1974

Alaska Travel Publications, 1974, Exploring Katmai National Monument and the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes: Anchorage, AK, Alaska Travel Publications, p. 49-69, 71-75, 85-98.

Geomorphic reconnaissance, Katmai National Monument, 1971

Hamilton, T.D., 1971, Geomorphic reconnaissance, Katmai National Monument: Fairbanks, Alaska, University of Alaska, 49 p.

Gravity survey in the general area of the Katmai National Monument, Alaska, 1968

Kienle, Juergen, 1968, Gravity survey in the general area of the Katmai National Monument, Alaska: University of Alaska Fairbanks Ph.D. dissertation, 151 p.

Seismic and gravity studies on the Alaska Peninsula, 1967

Berg, E., Kubota, S., and Kienle, J., 1967, Seismic and gravity studies on the Alaska Peninsula: University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute Annual Report 1966-67, p. 78-79.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Preliminary determination of crustal structure in the Katmai National Monument, Alaska, 1967

Berg, E., Kienle, J., and Kubota, S., 1967, Preliminary determination of crustal structure in the Katmai National Monument, Alaska: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, v. 57, n. 6, p. 1367-1392.
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A summary of volcanic and seismic activity in Katmai National Monument, Alaska, 1967

Ward, P. L., and Matumoto, T., 1967, A summary of volcanic and seismic activity in Katmai National Monument, Alaska: Bulletin Volcanologique, v. 31, p.107-129.
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Volcanic and seismic activity in Katmai National Monument, Alaska, 1967

Ward, P. L., 1967, Volcanic and seismic activity in Katmai National Monument, Alaska: Columbia University unpublished M.S. thesis, 78 p.

Microearthquake study of Mount Katmai and vicinity, Alaska, 1967

Matumoto, Tosimatu, and Ward, P. L., 1967, Microearthquake study of Mount Katmai and vicinity, Alaska: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 72, n. 10, p. 2557-2568.

Evidence for magma in the Katmai volcanic range, 1967

Kubota, S., and Berg, E., 1967, Evidence for magma in the Katmai volcanic range: Bulletin Volcanologique, v. 31, p. 175-214.
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Volcanic activity in Katmai National Monument, in early August, 1965, 1966

Ward, Peter, and Ward, Sandra, 1966, Volcanic activity in Katmai National Monument, in early August, 1965: Earthquake Notes, v. 37, n. 3, p. 19-34.

Geology of the Mount Katmai area, Alaska, 1959

Keller, A. S., and Reiser, H. N., 1959, Geology of the Mount Katmai area, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1058-G, p. 261-298, 2 sheets, scale 1:250,000.
plate 29 PDF 32 MB
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Alaska Peninsula-Aleutian Islands, 1958

Powers, H. A., 1958, Alaska Peninsula-Aleutian Islands: in Williams, H., (ed.), Landscapes of Alaska, Los Angeles, CA, University of California Press, p. 61-75.

Preliminary summary report on the shorelines, glaciation and non-volcanic rocks of Katmai National Monument, 1954

Lucke, J. B., 1954, Preliminary summary report on the shorelines, glaciation and non-volcanic rocks of Katmai National Monument: in Luntey, R. S., (comp.), Interim report on Katmai Project, Katmai National Monument, Alaska, p. 50-54.

Current volcanic activity in Katmai National Monument, 1954

Muller, E. H., Juhle, R. W., and Coulter, H. W., 1954, Current volcanic activity in Katmai National Monument: in Luntey, R. S., Interim report on Katmai Project, Washington D.C., U.S. National Park Service, p. 62-66.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Eruption of Trident Volcano, Katmai National Monument, Alaska, Feb.-June 1953, 1954

Snyder, G. L., 1954, Eruption of Trident Volcano, Katmai National Monument, Alaska, Feb.-June 1953: U.S. Geological Survey Circular C 0318, 7 p., 2 sheets, scale unknown.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Magnificent Katmai, 1952

Sumner, Lowell, 1952, Magnificent Katmai: Sierra Club Bulletin, v. 37, n. 10, p. 29-51.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Alaska volcanoes ready big blow-up, 1950

MacDonald, Lachlan, 1950, Alaska volcanoes ready big blow-up: Oakland Tribune, Oakland, CA, September 10, 1950, p. B-5.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Alaska and the Aleutian belt, 1946

Coleman, S. N., 1946, Alaska and the Aleutian belt: chapter 16 of Volcanoes, New and Old, New York, The John Day Company, p. 155-165.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

A chemical study of the fumaroles of the Katmai region, 1923

Allen, E. T., and Zies, E. G., 1923, A chemical study of the fumaroles of the Katmai region: National Geographic Society Contributed Technical Papers, Katmai Series 0002, p. 75-155.

Our greatest national monument: The National Geographic Society completes its explorations in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, 1921

Griggs, R. F., 1921, Our greatest national monument: The National Geographic Society completes its explorations in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes: National Geographic Magazine, v. 40, n. 3, p. 219-292.
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Photographs, 1913-1919, 1919

Griggs, R. F., and National Geographic Society Washington, DC, 1919, Photographs, 1913-1919: Washington, D.C., National Geographic Society, unpaged.

Past volcanic activity in the Aleutian arc,

Coats, R. R., Past volcanic activity in the Aleutian arc: U.S. Geological Survey Volcano Investigations Report 1, 18 p.
full-text PDF 22.3 MB
Hard Copy held by AVO at FBKS - CEC file cabinet

Ash Forecasting

Mathematical models developed by the USGS forecast various aspects of how a volcanic ash plume will interact with wind—where, how high, and how fast ash particles will be transported in the atmosphere, as well as where ash will fall out and accumulate on the ground. AVO runs these models when a volcano is restless by assuming a reasonable hypothetical eruption, to provide a pre-eruptive forecast of areas likely to be affected. During an ongoing eruption, AVO will update the forecast with actual observations (eruption start time and duration, plume height) as they become available.

View the current airborne ash cloud models for Griggs

Ashfall thickness forecast

The Ash3d model was developed by the USGS to forecast how a volcanic ash plume will interact with wind and where ash will fall out and accumulate on the ground. AVO runs these models twice daily when a volcano is restless by assuming a reasonable hypothetical eruption altitude and duration. The map shows the model results of ashfall thickness for areas that are likely to be affected, if one were to occur. During an ongoing eruption, AVO will update the forecast with actual observations (eruption start time and duration, plume height) as they become available, and these plots will be automatically updated. The National Weather Service Anchorage Forecast Office will issue the official ashfall warning product and post them at weather.gov/afc

THESE PRODUCTS MAY NOT BE CURRENT.

During an actual eruption, see National Weather Service forecasts of ashfall:https://weather.gov/afc.

Ashfall Forecast

Click on the X on the graphic (upper right) to expand the map to show the map legend.

Ashfall Start Time

This map shows the modeled estimate of the time it would take for ashfall to begin following an eruption. It corresponds to the ashfall thickness forecast map shown above. This map uses the start time of either the twice-daily hypothetical model runs (time shown in the legend) or the actual eruption start time (if one were to occur). In the case of an actual eruption, the National Weather Service Anchorage Forecast Office will issue the official ashfall warning product that includes the ashfall start time and post them at weather.gov/afc

THESE PRODUCTS MAY NOT BE CURRENT.

During an actual eruption, see National Weather Service forecasts of ashfall:https://weather.gov/afc.

Ashfall Start Times Forecast

Click on the X on the graphic (upper right) to expand the map to show the map legend.
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