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Hoodoo Mountain   »  Summary

Hoodoo Mountain

Hoodoo Mountain Photo

Country:Canada
Subregion Name:Canada
Volcano Number:1200-08-
Volcano Type: Subglacial volcano
Volcano Status:Tephrochronology
Last Known Eruption: 7050 BC (?) 
Summit Elevation: 1850 m 6,069 feet
Latitude: 56.78°N 56°47'0"N
Longitude: 131.28°W 131°17'0"W

Hoodoo Mountain is a flat-topped Pleistocene-to-Holocene volcano in the Boundary Ranges of NW British Columbia near the Alaska border that is composed of both subglacial and subaerial volcanic products. Valley glaciers surround the volcano on all except the south side. The Pleistocene Little Bear Mountain basaltic tuya adjoins Hoodoo Mountain on the immediate north. Most of the volcano formed beneath glacial ice; all flank flows appear to have originated from beneath the current 4-km-wide summit icecap. More than 90% of the volcano, which dates back to at least 100,000 years, consists of interlayered peralkaline phonolitic and trachytic lava flows and hyaloclastites. At least one subaerial explosive eruption produced a welded and unwelded ignimbrite sequence on the north side. The most recent stage of volcanic activity produced subaerial unglaciated lava flows with well-preserved lava channels that originated from summit and flank vents about 9000 years ago.

Global Volcanism ProgramDepartment of Mineral SciencesNational Museum of Natural HistorySmithsonian Institution

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