Tuya Butte

Tuya Butte
Highest point
Elevation 1,685 m (5,528 ft)
Prominence 355 m (1,165 ft)
Coordinates 59°07′58.1″N 130°34′04.1″W / 59.132806°N 130.567806°W / 59.132806; -130.567806Coordinates: 59°07′58.1″N 130°34′04.1″W / 59.132806°N 130.567806°W / 59.132806; -130.567806
Geography
Location British Columbia, Canada
Parent range Tuya Range
Topo map NTS 104.O/02
Geology
Age of rock Pleistocene
Mountain type Tuya
Volcanic arc/belt Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province
Last eruption Pleistocene

Tuya Butte is a tuya in the Tuya Range of north-central British Columbia, Canada. It is a bit less isolated from other ranges than neighbouring Mount Josephine. Some of the other volcanoes in the area include South Tuya, Ash Mountain, and Mathews Tuya.

Tuya Butte was the first tuya analyzed in the geological literature,[1] and its name has since become standard worldwide among volcanologists in referring to and writing about tuyas. The Tuya Mountains Provincial Park was recently established to protect this unusual landscape, which lies north of Tuya Lake and south of the Jennings River near the boundary with the Yukon Territory. Tuya Butte is regarded as among the best examples of this landform outside Iceland and Antarctica.[2]

Tuya Butte was named by Canadian volcanologist Bill Mathews in association with adjacent Tuya Lake and Butte Lake. The term tuya may be derived from a Tahltan word.[3]

Geology

Tuya Butte is part of the Tuya Volcanic Field, a volcanic field that includes tuyas, postglacial lapilli cones and lava flows and several small shield volcanoes formed during the Pleistocene and Holocene. This in turn is part of the Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province from Prince Rupert, into the Yukon and the Alaska border caused by rifting of the North American Plate as the Pacific Plate slides northward along the Queen Charlotte Fault.

Tuya Butte formed when magma intruded into and melted a vertical pipe in the overlying Cordilleran Ice Sheet. The partially molten mass cooled as a large block, forming the highly developed hyaloclastite and pillow lava with gravity flattening its upper surface. Horizontal columns occur at numerous locations along the periphery of the mass. The absence of glacial erosion of the tuya suggests that it erupted during the Pleistocene. The volcano has no summit crater or obvious vent, suggesting the volcano was fed by a fissure, although several indictions suggest a vent location near a large cirque on the north face.[4] Other subglacial volcanoes can be found in the Wells Gray-Clearwater volcanic field and the Garibaldi Volcanic Belt.

See also

References

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