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Daily OMI satellite picture

Daily Vanuatu SO2 Coverage
(In partnership with GNS Science, NZ)


OMI pictures

09/09/2010
Tanna

 

Yasur, 2004
Volcano Name: Yasur 
  
Volcano Type:Stratovolcano 
Current Activity:Vanuatu Volcanic Alert Level 1 
Last Known Eruption:2009 
Summit Elevation:361 m 1,184 feet 
Latitude: 19.53°S 19°32'0"S
Longitude: 169.442°E 169°26'30"E
 
 
Yasur, the best-known and most frequently visited of the Vanuatu volcanoes, has been in more-or-less continuous strombolian and vulcanian activity since Captain Cook observed ash eruptions in 1774. This style of activity may have continued for the past 800 years. Yasur, located at the SE tip of Tanna Island, is a mostly unvegetated 361-m-high pyroclastic cone with a nearly circular, 400-m-wide summit crater. Yasur is largely contained within the small Yenkahe caldera and is the youngest of a group of Holocene volcanic centers constructed over the down-dropped NE flank of the Pleistocene Tukosmeru volcano. The Yenkahe horst is located within the Siwi ring fracture, a 4-km-wide, horseshoe-shaped caldera associated with eruption of the andesitic Siwi pyroclastic sequence. Active tectonism along the Yenkahe horst accompanying eruptions of Yasur has raised Port Resolution harbor more than 20 m during the past century.

 

 

(Partially sourced from the Global Volcanism Program Website) 

  


 

Current Geophysical Monitoring Network: TBF

 


 

Publications: TBF