| Sunset
Crater appeared in the winter of 1064-65 when molten rock
sprayed out of a crack in the ground high into the air,
solidified, then fell to earth as large bombs
or smaller cinders. As periodic eruptions continued over the
next 200 years, the heavier debris accumulated around the vent
creating a 1,000 foot cone. The lightest, smallest particles
blew the farthest, dusting 800 square miles of northern
Arizona with ash.
Perhaps as spectacular as the original pyrotechnics
were two subsequent lava flows: the Kana-A flow in 1064 and
the Bonito flow in 1180. They destroyed all living
things in their paths. |
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The processes that created Sunset
Crater also created a sculpture garden of extraordinary forms at its
base. As new gas vents opened suddenly, spatter
cones sprouted from the
ground like minatures of the cone itself. Moving lava developed a
crust on the surface where it cooled; caves were formed as the
hotter material beneath drained away. Partially cooled lava, pushing
through cracks like toothpaste from a tube, solidified into
wedge-shaped squeeze-ups, grooved from scraping against the harder
rock.
In a final burst of activity, around
1250, lava containing iron and sulphur shot out of the vent. The red
and yellow oxidized particles fell back onto the rim as a permanent
"sunset" so bright that the cone appears to glow from
intense volcanic heat.
The Sunset Crater volcanic chain,
comprised of four vents forming a volcanic chain 10 km long oriented
N60W and three associated flows, is in eastern part of the San
Francisco volcanic field,
Arizona.
At the base of Sunset Crater, a
1-mile foot trail loops through the dramatic volcanic landscape. The
brittle aa
[pronounced ah-ah], similar to the lava from Hawaiian volcanoes, and
the deep, loose cinders at Sunset Crater do not seem a hospitable
environment, yet many species thrive here: ponderosa pines, Abert's
squirrels, Steller's jays, pinyon pines, one-seed juniper,
jackrabbits and pronghorn antelope, along with lizards, snakes,
coyotes and bobcats.
Sunset Crater is one of the youngest
geological features in Arizona, only about 900 years old. It lies on
the eastern edge of the San Francisco Volcanic field. It is a
classic cinder cone
whose red and orange tints are due to oxidation by steaming hot
gases which continued for some time after the other volcanic
activity subsided.
The layer of cinders surrounding the crater
extends far to the east and north, covering an area of about 120
square miles. The cinders are very light weight because they are
filled with bubbles, due to the large amount of pressurized gas that
was responsible for the ejection of this material high into the air.
The molten lava, having a lower gas content, pushed out at the base
of the cinder cone
and flowed over the surface. Little weathering or erosion of the
cinder cone has taken place due to the cool dry climate (the
altitude here is over 7000 feet above sea level). Rain and snow melt
will sink right through the cinders, not eroding the surface layers.
The western lava flow from Sunset Crater, the
Bonita flow, is still fresh and dark. Closer inspection, however,
will show that lichen is already spotting the surface of the lava.
Some trees have taken root in a few cinder patches and grass and
shrubs are moving in from the edges of the flow. The most common
type of lava in this flow is aa,
which is extremely rough and hard to walk on.
There are about 400 cinder
cones in the San
Francisco Volcanic field, of which
Sunset Crater is one of the youngest. These are remnants of the last
volcanic activity in this region, long after San Francisco Peak
itself had taken its current form. The activity from these cinder
cones first drove the local population away from the area. When they
later returned, they found that the cinders acted to conserve the
moisture in the soil by curbing evaporation. This led to a short
lived population explosion on the edges of the cinder fields.
Wupatki National Monument is adjacent to Sunset Crater. Several of
the small communities that were built nearby can be seen on the loop
drive.
Sunset Crater is in the eastern part of the
San Francisco volcanic field. Sunset Crater, one of the youngest
scoria cones in the contiguous United States, began erupting between
the growing seasons of 1064 and 1065 A.D. Eruptions continued in the
area for many decades. The cone was named by John Wesley Powell,
first director of the U.S. Geological Survey, for the topmost cap of
oxidized, red spatter which makes it appear bathed in the light of
the sunset. The red, pink, and yellow colors at the top of the cone
are silica, gypsum, and iron oxide that formed from fumaroles.
Sunset Crater is a nearly symmetrical cone
made of dark-gray scoria
and scattered bombs.
The cone is about 1,000 feet (300 m) high and 1 mile (1.6 km) in
base diameter.

The eruption at Sunset Crater covered and area
of 800 square miles (2,100 square kilometers) with lapilli
and ash.
The eruption was Strombolian
in style and large, with eruption columns as high as several hundred
feet (meters). The tephra
covers parts on the Bonito and Kana-a lava flows which were erupted
from Sunset Crater. The Bonito lava flow erupted from the west and
northwest base of the cone and covered an area of 1.8 square miles
(4.6 square kilometers). The Kana-a lava flow was erupted from the
base of the east side of the cone and traveled 6 miles (9.6 km) down
a wash.
The Sunset eruption is unusual because the
volume of volcanic products (about 0.7 cubic miles, 3 cubic km) is
large for a strombolian
event, the air fall dispersal was large, and the discharge rate for magma
was high.
The Sunset event had a severe effect on the Sinagua Indians that
lived in the area, forcing them to temporarily leave.
Glossary
Aa:
Hawaiian word used to describe a lava flow whose surface is broken
into rough angular fragments.
Ash:
Fine particles of pulverized rock blown from an explosion vent.
Measuring less than 1/10 inch in diameter, ash may be
either solid or molten when first erupted. By far the most common
variety is vitric ash, glassy particles formed by gas bubbles
bursting through liquid magma.
Bomb:
Fragment of molten or semi-molten rock, 2 1/2 inches to many feet in
diameter, which is blown out during an eruption.
Because of their plastic condition, bombs are often modified in
shape during their flight or upon impact.
Cinder
cone: A volcanic
cone built entirely of loose fragmented material (pyroclastics.)
Lapilli:
Literally, "little stones"; round to angular rock
fragments measuring 1/10 inch to 2 1/2 inches in diameter, which may
be
ejected in either a solid or molten state.
Magma:
Molten rock beneath the surface of the earth.
Pyroclastic:
Pertaining to fragmented (clastic) rock material formed by a
volcanic explosion or ejection from a volcanic vent.
San
Francisco Mountain:
San Francisco Mountain is the most prominent volcano in the
San Francisco volcanic field. The volcanic field covers 1,935 square
miles (5,000 square km) and includes more than 600 vents. Most of
the vents erupted basalt lava flows. Basaltic scoria cones are
scattered throughout the field. Intermediate to silica-rich
eruptions formed a few localized volcanic centers.
Scoria:
A bomb-size (> 64 mm) pyroclast that is irregular in form and
generally very vesicular. It is usually heavier, darker, and more
crystalline than pumice.
Spatter
cone: A low,
steep-sided cone of spatter built up on a fissure or vent; it is
usually of basaltic material.
Strombolian
eruption: A type of
volcanic eruption characterized by jetting of clots or fountains of
fluid basaltic lava from a
central crater.
Tephra:
Materials of all types and sizes that are erupted from a crater or
volcanic vent and deposited from the air.
Vent:
The opening at the earth's surface through which volcanic materials
issue forth.
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