Logo link to homepage

Global Volcanism Program | Image GVP-02283

This renowned exposure of pyroclastic flow deposits from Kurile Lake caldera has been named Kutkhiny Baty because of its erosional features. The pyroclastic flow deposit originated from the caldera-forming eruption of Kurile Lake about 7,600 years ago, one of the largest Holocene eruptions in Kamchatka. The deposit is about 100 m thick at this location on the Ozernaya River, 3 km W of Kurile Lake. Photo by Oleg Volynets (Institute of Volcanology, Petropavlovsk).

This renowned exposure of pyroclastic flow deposits from Kurile Lake caldera has been named Kutkhiny Baty because of its erosional features. The pyroclastic flow deposit originated from the caldera-forming eruption of Kurile Lake about 7,600 years ago, one of the largest Holocene eruptions in Kamchatka. The deposit is about 100 m thick at this location on the Ozernaya River, 3 km W of Kurile Lake.

Photo by Oleg Volynets (Institute of Volcanology, Petropavlovsk).

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

Galleries: Volcanic Outcrops

Keywords: deposit | outcrop | pumice | geology | ignimbrite


Kurile Lake