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Daily OMI satellite picture

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


OMI pictures

09/09/2010
Vanua Lava

 

 Vanua Lava, 2007
Volcano Name: Suretamatai 
  
Volcano Type:Complex volcano 
Current Activity:Vanuatu Volcanic Alert Level 0 
Last Known Eruption:1966 
Summit Elevation:921 m 3,022 feet 
Latitude: 13.80°S13°48'0"S 
Longitude: 167.47°E167°28'0"E
 
 
Suretamatai volcano forms much of Vanua Lava Island, one of the largest of Vanuatu's Banks Islands. The younger lavas of 921-m-high Suretamatai (also known as Soritimeat) volcano overlie a number of small older stratovolcanoes that form the island. In contrast to other large volcanoes of Vanuatu, the dominantly basaltic-to-andesitic Suretamatai does not contain a youthful summit caldera. A chain of small stratovolcanoes, oriented along a NNE-SSW line, gives the low-angle volcano an irregular profile. The youngest cone, near the northern end of the chain, is the largest and contains a lake of variable depth within its 900-m-wide, 100-m-deep summit crater. Historical activity, beginning during the 19th century, has been restricted to moderate explosive eruptions.

 

 

(Partially sourced from the Global Volcanism Program Website) 

 

 


 

Current Geophysical Monitoring Network: TBF

 


 

Publications: TBF