Alu Volcano
Updated: 29. Apr. 2024 14:18 GMT -
fissure vents (shield volcano) 429 m (1,407 ft)
Äthiopien, 13.82°N / 40.55°E
Aktueller Status: normal / ruhend (1 von 5)
Äthiopien, 13.82°N / 40.55°E
Aktueller Status: normal / ruhend (1 von 5)
A series of eruptive fissures near Dalaffilla volcano at the northern end of the Erta Ale range (Danakil desert, Ethiopia), many of which have erupted voluminous basaltic lava flows, as recently as in Nov. 2008.
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Ausbrüche des Alu: 2008 (starting Nov 4)
Letzte Erdbeben in der Nähe
Uhrzeit | Mag. / Tiefe | Entfernung / Ort |
Beschreibung
Alu volcano along with Dalaffilla volcano form a twin volcano at the northen end of the Erta Ale range and they are often referred to as Alu-Dalaffilla volcano.While Dalaffilla is a small but steep stratovolcano of mainly silic lava domes, Alu is characterized by a series of fissures that have erupted basaltic lava flows.
The summit of Alu volcano, immediately NW of conical Dalaffilla volcano, is an uplifted ellipsoidal volcanic horst, elongated in a NNW-SSE direction.
Strong fumarolic activity is located on the numerous NNW-SSE parallel faults, some of which have uplifts of 100 m. Fissure vents west of the horst have fed silicic lava flows, and other fissures to the south have produced voluminous youthful basaltic lava flows that extend north as far as Lake Bakili.
The recent eruption starting Nov 4, 2008, from a fissure between Alu and Dalaffilla volcanoes has modified the local topography by covering a large area with lava flows.
Alu Volcano Photos
Nackte Bäume zeichneten sich am 1. Dezember 2012 vor dem aktiven Lavadom des Vulkans Paluweh (Floressee, Indonesien) ab. (Photo: Tom Pfeiffer)
Die Kirche Guadalupe in Teguise (Photo: Tobias Schorr)
Der neu wachsende Lavadom des Vulkans Paluweh, Flores-Meer, Indonesien (Photo: Tom Pfeiffer)
Tagsüber fallen Steinschläge aus dem aktiven Lavadom von Paluweh und erzeugen Aschewolken. (Photo: Tom Pfeiffer)