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Lvinaya Past

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Lvinaya Past
Highest point
Elevation528 m (1,732 ft)
Coordinates44°36′29″N 146°59′38″E / 44.608°N 146.994°E / 44.608; 146.994
Geography
Lvinaya Past is located in Russia
Lvinaya Past
Lvinaya Past
Location of Lvinaya Past in Russia
LocationIturup, Kuril Islands, Russia
Geology
Mountain typeStratovolcano / Caldera
Last eruption7480 BC ± 80 years

Lvinaya Past (Russian: Львиная Пасть, literally "Lion's Maw", after a rock that emerges from the sea and resembles a sleeping lion), also known as Moekeshiwan (Japanese: 萌消湾), is a volcano in the southern part of Iturup in the Kuril Islands, administered by Russia and claimed by Japan.[1] The volcano is characterized by a large caldera that is flooded by the Sea of Okhotsk. A large eruption occurred early during the Holocene which reached a volcanic explosivity index of 7.

Location

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Iturup island contains about nine stratovolcanoes, some pyroclastic cones, one somma volcano and several geothermal fields.[2]: 166  Among these, Lvinaya Past is formed by a 7-by-9-kilometre (4.3 mi × 5.6 mi) wide[3] and 550-metre (1,800 ft) deep caldera, which is connected with the Sea of Okhotsk by a 5-kilometre (3.1 mi) wide and maximally 50-metre (160 ft) deep strait.[1] The volcano is 528 metres (1,732 ft) high,[3] almost 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) above the bottom of the caldera.[1] The caldera lies close to the southernmost point of Iturup and is flanked to the east by the Urbich volcano and to the southwest by the Berutarube volcano.[4]: 47  The isthmuses east and southwest of Lvinaya Past are covered by its eruption products.[4]: 48 

Series of eruptions

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Large eruptions took place 13,000 and 12,300 years ago,[4]: 48  and a major eruption occurred 7480 ± 80 BC.[5]: 419  The submarine caldera formed during this eruption and heavily altered the topography on Iturup, generating an ignimbrite[6]: 188  which joined the three southernmost volcanoes of Iturup to the main island.[1] The total volume of tephra ejected amounts to 170 cubic kilometres (41 cu mi).[7]: 131  This eruption had a volcanic explosivity index of 7,[5]: 419  making it one of the largest eruptions that are known to have occurred in the Kuril Islands,[1][6]: 189  and the strongest known to have occurred during the Holocene in the Southern Kurils.[8]: 64 

Younger Dryas eruptions and their impact

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Ice cores taken in the Siberian Altai Mountains demonstrate increased sulfate concentrations at the time, possibly stemming from large sulfate release by the eruptions of Lvinaya Past and contemporaneous large scale activity at Caldera Fisher in Alaska and Pinatubo in the Philippines[5]: 419  and may relate to the Younger Dryas event.[9] Habitats may have been destroyed to distances of 50 kilometres (31 mi) from the volcano,[10]: 137  and Iturup was devastated.[11]: 148  The development of alder-containing birch forests in the region may have been favoured by the ash fall from the eruption, which would have killed more susceptible conifers.[7]: 131  The impact of the eruption may have extended all the way to southern North America.[12]

Magma content

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Lvinaya Past has erupted tholeiitic magmas with a low potassium content.[13]: 392  Other rocks include andesite, basaltic andesite, basalt, dacite and picrite.[1] The caldera-forming eruption ejected dacitic material with hornblende and quartz forming phenocrysts.[8]: 73 

Nearby volcanoes

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Other volcanoes on Iturup include Astonupuri, Baransky, Berutarube, Bogatyr Ridge, Chirip, Demon, Golets-Tornyi, Grozny Group, Medvezhy and Past.[2]: 166 

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f "Moekeshiwan [Lvinaya Past]". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
  2. ^ a b Glasby, G. P.; Cherkashov, G. A.; Gavrilenko, G. M.; Rashidov, V. A.; Slovtsov, I. B. (2006-09-20). "Submarine hydrothermal activity and mineralization on the Kurile and western Aleutian island arcs, N.W. Pacific". Marine Geology. 231 (1–4): 163–180. Bibcode:2006MGeol.231..163G. doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2006.06.003.
  3. ^ a b Oppenheimer, Clive (2011-05-26). Eruptions that Shook the World. Cambridge University Press. p. 359. ISBN 9781139496391.
  4. ^ a b c Smirnov, S. Z.; Rybin, A. V.; Sokolova, E. N.; Kuzmin, D. V.; Degterev, A. V.; Timina, T. Yu. (2017-01-01). "Felsic magmas of the caldera-forming eruptions on the Iturup Island: the first results of studies of melt inclusions in phenocrysts from pumices of the Lvinaya Past and Vetrovoy Isthmus calderas". Russian Journal of Pacific Geology. 11 (1): 46–63. doi:10.1134/S1819714017010080. ISSN 1819-7159. S2CID 132670284.
  5. ^ a b c Aizen, Elena M.; Aizen, Vladimir B.; Takeuchi, Nozomu; Mayewski, Paul A.; Grigholm, Bjorn; Joswiak, Daniel R.; Nikitin, Stanislav A.; Fujita, Koji; Nakawo, Masayoshi (2016-06-01). "Abrupt and moderate climate changes in the mid-latitudes of Asia during the Holocene". Journal of Glaciology. 62 (233): 411–439. Bibcode:2016JGlac..62..411A. doi:10.1017/jog.2016.34. ISSN 0022-1430.
  6. ^ a b MacInnes, Breanyn; Fitzhugh, Ben; Holman, Darryl (2014-06-01). "Controlling for Landform Age When Determining the Settlement History of the Kuril Islands". Geoarchaeology. 29 (3): 185–201. doi:10.1002/gea.21473. ISSN 1520-6548. PMC 4326108. PMID 25684855.
  7. ^ a b Razjigaeva, Nadezhda G.; Ganzey, Larisa A.; Grebennikova, Tatyana A.; Belyanina, Nina I.; Mokhova, Ludmila M.; Arslanov, Khikmat A.; Chernov, Sergei B. (2013-03-21). "Holocene climatic changes and vegetation development in the Kuril Islands". Quaternary International. The Baikal-Hokkaido Archaeology Project: Environmental archives, proxies and reconstruction approaches. 290–291: 131. Bibcode:2013QuInt.290..126R. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2012.06.034.
  8. ^ a b Razzhigaeva, Nadezhda G.; Matsumoto, Akiko; Nakagawa, Mitsuhiro (2016-03-18). "Age, source, and distribution of Holocene tephra in the southern Kurile Islands: Evaluation of Holocene eruptive activities in the southern Kurile arc". Quaternary International. Japanese Quaternary Studies. 397: 63–78. Bibcode:2016QuInt.397...63R. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2015.07.070.
  9. ^ Sun, N.; Brandon, A. D.; Forman, S. L.; Waters, M. R.; Befus, K. S. (1 July 2020). "Volcanic origin for Younger Dryas geochemical anomalies ca. 12,900 cal B.P." Science Advances. 6 (31): eaax8587. Bibcode:2020SciA....6.8587S. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aax8587. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 7399481. PMID 32789166.
  10. ^ Hopi, Hoekstra; William, Fagan (1998-05-01). "Body size, dispersal ability and compositional disharmony: the carnivore‐dominated fauna of the Kuril Islands". Diversity and Distributions. 4 (3): 135–149. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2699.1998.00016.x. ISSN 1472-4642. S2CID 83995728.
  11. ^ Cassidy, Jim; Ponkratova, Irina; Fitzhugh, Ben, eds. (2022). Maritime Prehistory of Northeast Asia: With a Foreword by Dr. William W. Fitzhugh. The Archaeology of Asia-Pacific Navigation. Vol. 6. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore. doi:10.1007/978-981-19-1118-7. ISBN 978-981-19-1117-0.
  12. ^ Sun, Nan; Brandon, Alan D.; Forman, Steven L.; Waters, Michael R. (1 November 2021). "Geochemical evidence for volcanic signatures in sediments of the Younger Dryas event". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 312: 57–74. Bibcode:2021GeCoA.312...57S. doi:10.1016/j.gca.2021.07.031. ISSN 0016-7037.
  13. ^ Volynets, Oleg N. (1994-04-01). "Geochemical Types, Petrology, and Genesis of Late Cenozoic Volcanic Rocks from the Kurile-Kamchatka Island-Arc System". International Geology Review. 36 (4): 373–405. Bibcode:1994IGRv...36..373V. doi:10.1080/00206819409465467. ISSN 0020-6814.