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Global Volcanism Program | Image GVP-00461

Pago (right), seen here from the N, is a young cone that was constructed within the 5.5 x 7.5 km Witori caldera. Caldera formation occurred about 3,300 years ago and was accompanied by voluminous pyroclastic flows. Pago, which may have formed less than 350 years ago, has grown to a height above the caldera rim. The vegetated lava flow that descends to the left between Pago and the peak to the left was emplaced during a 1911-18 eruption. The 5-km-long lava flow banked against the eastern caldera rim. Photo by Wally Johnson, 1968 (Australia Bureau of Mineral Resources).

Pago (right), seen here from the N, is a young cone that was constructed within the 5.5 x 7.5 km Witori caldera. Caldera formation occurred about 3,300 years ago and was accompanied by voluminous pyroclastic flows. Pago, which may have formed less than 350 years ago, has grown to a height above the caldera rim. The vegetated lava flow that descends to the left between Pago and the peak to the left was emplaced during a 1911-18 eruption. The 5-km-long lava flow banked against the eastern caldera rim.

Photo by Wally Johnson, 1968 (Australia Bureau of Mineral Resources).

Creative Commons Icon This image is made available under the Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 license terms.

Keywords: lava flow | cone | caldera | crater


Witori