Earth:California Volcano Observatory

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Short description: Research center in California, United States
United States Geological Survey
California Volcano Observatory
California Volcano Observatory operations room.jpg
The CalVO operations room in Menlo Park
Agency overview
Formed2012
HeadquartersMenlo Park, California, United States
Agency executive
  • Dr. Andrew Calvert[1], Scientist-in-Charge (USGS)
Websitehttps://www.usgs.gov/observatories/calvo

The California Volcano Observatory (CalVO) is the volcano observatory that monitors the volcanic and geologic activity of California and Nevada. It is a part of the Volcano Hazards Program of the United States Geological Survey, a scientific agency of the United States government.[2]

Originally, the volcano observatory was known as the Long Valley Observatory which monitored volcanic activity east of the Sierra Nevada in Mono County, California which included Long Valley Caldera, Mammoth Mountain, and the Mono–Inyo Craters.

In 2012, the Long Valley Observatory was integrated into the new California Volcano Observatory based in Menlo Park, California which covers the entire states of California and Nevada, this includes the southern Cascade Range volcanoes in the state of California which were previously under the jurisdiction of the Cascades Volcano Observatory.[3]

Monitored volcanoes

These are the volcanoes monitored by the California Volcano Observatory, in order of highest to lowest risk assessment.

Mt Shasta

According to USGS risk assessment of the volcanoes in CalVO's region, the following volcanoes were ranked "very high threat potential".[4]

  • Mount Shasta in far-northern California, north of Redding
  • Lassen Volcanic Center in Lassen Volcanic National Park
  • Long Valley Caldera in eastern California
Mono-Inyo Craters

These were ranked "high threat potential":[4]

  • Mono-Inyo Craters in eastern California
  • Clear Lake Volcanic Field north of the San Francisco Bay Area
  • Medicine Lake Volcano in far-northern California, northeast of Mt Shasta
  • Salton Buttes in far-southern California, at the Salton Sea
Soda Lakes

These were ranked "moderate threat potential":[4]

One was ranked "Low to Very Low Threat Potential":[4]

  • Golden Trout Creek volcanic field in Sequoia National Forest.[5]

Other volcanoes in the region have not been assessed at one of these risk levels that warrant monitoring. Volcanoes which have not erupted during the Holocene were not included. USGS noted that though less probable it is still possible for volcanoes to erupt on longer intervals than that.[4]

USGS map of the Mono Basin area, showing the Long Valley Caldera (click on to see detail).

See also

  • Bishop Tuff
  • Hot Creek (Mono County, California)

References

External links

[ ⚑ ] 37°27′23″N 122°10′17″W / 37.45639°N 122.17139°W / 37.45639; -122.17139