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Cascade Volcanic Arc calderas

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The Cascade Volcanic Arc is a chain of volcanoes stretching from southern British Columbia down to northern California. Within the arc there is a variety of stratovolcanoes like Mount Rainier and broad shield volcanoes like Medicine Lake. But calderas are very rare in the Cascades, with very few forming over the 39 million year lifespan of the arc.

The few eruptions that do form calderas rarely make it into the VEI 7 range, staying confined to the VEI 6 range in most cases. The only volcanoes known to have produced eruptions within the VEI 7 range are Crater Lake, the Mt. Baker Volcanic Field, and the Lassen Volcanic Center.

All of the exceptionally large caldera-forming eruptions within the cascades erupted silica-rich magmas, with the three VEI 7s erupting mainly rhyodacite and rhyolite.

Crater Lake, the most recent caldera to form in the Cascades
Kulshan Caldera's intracaldera ignimbrite deposit near Upper Swift Creek in the northwestern Mount Baker volcanic field, Washington.

List of calderas

Volcano Caldera Name Caldera Size Age Eruption Unit Name Magma Volume (km) Tephra Volume (km) VEI Notes Reference(s)
Silverthrone Silverthrone caldera 20 km wide <1,100,000 N/A N/A N/A Poorly studied
Franklin Glacier Complex N/A 6 x 20 km <6,800,000 N/A N/A N/A Poorly studied
Coquihalla Volcanic Complex N/A 6 x 6 km <21,400,000 N/A N/A 50 Tephra volume does not represent

a single eruption

Hannegan Hannegan caldera 8 x 3.5 km 3,722,000 Ignimbrite of Hannegan Peak N/A N/A 6-7 Trap-door caldera, first collapse. Both ignimbrites have a combined magma volume of 127 km
3,720,000 Ignimbrite of Ruth Mountain N/A N/A 6-7 Trap-door caldera, second collapse
Big Bosom Buttes Big Bosom caldera 4 x 5 km ? Oligocene N/A N/A N/A Poorly studied
Mount Rahm ? Mount Rahm caldera N/A Oligocene N/A N/A N/A Poorly studied
Mount Baker Volcanic Field Kulshan Caldera 4.5 x 8 km 1,149,000 Lake Tapps tephra 124 N/A 7
Gamma Ridge ? Gamma Ridge caldera N/A 1,242,000 N/A 40 N/A 6-7 Poorly studied, trap-door caldera
Mount Aix Volcanic Complex Mount Aix caldera 6 x 9 28,000,000 Bumping River tuff-north N/A N/A 6-7 Cummalitave volume of Mt. Aix tuffs

exceeds 100 km

25,000,000 Bumping River tuff-east N/A N/A 6-7
25,000,000 Cash Prairie tuffs N/A N/A 6-7
Goat Rocks Devils Horns caldera 5 x 8 km 3,200,000 N/A N/A >60 6 Tephra volume may represent

multiple eruptions

Newberry Newberry Crater 6.4 x 8 km 80,000 Olema ash 14-22 N/A 6 Second caldera formation
230,000 Tepee Draw tuff 10 25 6 First caldera formation
Mount Mazama Crater Lake 8 x 10 km 5783 BCE Mazama ash 61 176 7 Largest Holocene eruption in the arc
29,900 Trego Hot Springs 8 20.8 6
Medicine Lake Medicine Lake caldera 7 x 12 km 171,000 Antelope Well tuff 20 N/A 6
Lassen Volcanic Center Rockland caldera N/A 610,000 Rockland tephra 130 326.7 7

Places where calderas could be

These are places that have experienced very large eruptions of ash and ignimbrite that reached a VEI of 6 or greater, but have no documented calderas.

Tumalo Volcanic Center

The Tumalo Volcanic Center is a volcano located just east of Bend, Oregon. It started producing large eruptions around 650,000 years ago, with its first eruption reaching a 5 on the VEI scale and erupting more than 1 km of magma. The volcano would go on to produce at least three more voluminous eruptions. The two largest eruptions ejected more than 5 km of magma. Eruptions of those sizes usually entail caldera collapses. However no calderas have been identified in this area.

Deschutes Formation

Between 6.25 to 5.45 million years ago the cascade volcanic arc flared up in activity. Producing far more explosive ignimbrite eruptions than usual. The activity was mostly focused within the central Oregon cascades. Over 78 individual eruptions have been identified and the total volume of pyroclastic products in the Deschutes formation is estimated to be between 400 and 675 km.

References

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