Hazard Notification System (HANS) for Volcanoes

Home | VONAs | Volcano Notice Search | Resources


USGS Volcano Notice - DOI-USGS-AVO-2024-09-06T17:29:39+00:00

Back


ALASKA VOLCANO OBSERVATORY WEEKLY UPDATE
U.S. Geological Survey
Friday, September 6, 2024, 10:13 AM AKDT (Friday, September 6, 2024, 18:13 UTC)


GREAT SITKIN (VNUM #311120)
52°4'35" N 176°6'39" W, Summit Elevation 5709 ft (1740 m)
Current Volcano Alert Level: WATCH
Current Aviation Color Code: ORANGE

No significant change occurred this week at Great Sitkin Volcano, where the ongoing effusive eruption continues to gradually fill the summit crater with lava. Slightly elevated surface temperatures from the active lava flow surface were observed last weekend when the weather was clear. Conditions have been cloudy since then. Seismic activity was low, with occasional small volcanic earthquakes.

The current, prolonged period of lava eruption at Great Sitkin Volcano began in July 2021 and has mainly been observed using satellite radar images that can view the volcano through cloud cover. A single explosive event occurred in May 2021; no other explosions have been detected since that time.  



Great Sitkin Volcano is a basaltic andesite volcano that occupies most of the northern half of Great Sitkin Island, a member of the Andreanof Islands group in the central Aleutian Islands. It is located 26 miles (43 km) east of the community of Adak. The volcano is a composite structure consisting of an older dissected volcano and a younger parasitic cone with a ~1 mile (1.5 km)-diameter summit crater. A steep-sided lava dome, emplaced during the 1974 eruption, occupies the center of the crater. That eruption produced at least one ash cloud that likely exceeded an altitude of 25,000 ft (7.6 km) above sea level. A poorly documented eruption occurred in 1945, also producing a lava dome that was partially destroyed in the 1974 eruption. Within the past 280 years a large explosive eruption produced pyroclastic flows that partially filled the Glacier Creek valley on the southwest flank.





CONTACT INFORMATION:

Matt Haney, Scientist-in-Charge, USGS mhaney@usgs.gov (907) 786-7497

David Fee, Coordinating Scientist, UAF dfee1@alaska.edu  (907) 378-5460



The Alaska Volcano Observatory is a cooperative program of the U.S. Geological Survey, the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute, and the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys.