Timeline of Volcanism

Here is much information and many links, that provide data about the Timeline of Volcanism on the Earth. If you look at the material, it will help you understand the overall concept of the Great Tribulation Period and how it will consist of Volcanic Activity on a Global Scale.

From:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_volcanism_on_Earth

This timeline of volcanism on Earth includes a list of major volcanic eruptions of approximately at least magnitude 6 on the Volcanic explosivity index (VEI) or equivalent sulfur dioxide emission during the Quaternary period (from 2.58 Mya to the present). Other volcanic eruptions are also listed.

Some eruptions cooled the global climate—inducing a volcanic winter—depending on the amount of sulfur dioxide emitted and the magnitude of the eruption.[1][2] Before the present Holocene epoch, the criteria are less strict because of scarce data availability, partly since later eruptions have destroyed the evidence. Only some eruptions before the Neogene period (from 23 Mya to 2.58 Mya) are listed. Known large eruptions after the Paleogene period (from 66 Mya to 23 Mya) are listed, especially those relating to the Yellowstone hotspot, Santorini caldera, and the Taupō Volcanic Zone.

Active volcanoes such as Stromboli, Mount Etna and Kīlauea do not appear on this list, but some back-arc basin volcanoes that generated calderas do appear. Some dangerous volcanoes in “populated areas” appear many times: Santorini six times, and Yellowstone hotspot 21 times. The Bismarck volcanic arc, New Britain, and the Taupō Volcanic Zone, New Zealand, appear often too.

In addition to the events listed below, there are many examples of eruptions in the Holocene on the Kamchatka Peninsula,[3] which are described in a supplemental table by Peter Ward.[4]

Large Quaternary eruptions

The Holocene epoch begins 11,700 years BP (10,000 14C years ago).[5]

1000–2000 AD

Overview of Common Era

This is a sortable summary of 27 major eruptions in the last 2000 years with VEI ≥6, implying an average of about 1.3 per century. The count does not include the notable VEI 5 eruptions of Mount St. Helens and Mount Vesuvius. Date uncertainties, tephra volumes, and references are also not included.

Caldera/ Eruption name Volcanic arc/ belt
or Subregion or Hotspot
VEI Date Known/proposed consequences
Mount Pinatubo Luzon Volcanic Arc 6 1991, Jun 15 Global temperature fell by 0.4 °C
Novarupta Aleutian Range 6 1912, Jun 6
Santa María Central America Volcanic Arc 6 1902, Oct 24
Krakatoa Sunda Arc 6 1883, Aug 26–27 At least 30,000 dead
Mount Tambora Lesser Sunda Islands 7 1815, Apr 10 Year Without a Summer (1816)
1808 mystery eruption Southwestern Pacific Ocean 6 1808, Dec A sulfate spike in ice cores
Long Island (Papua New Guinea) Bismarck Volcanic Arc 6 1660
Huaynaputina Andes, Central Volcanic Zone 6 1600, Feb 19 Russian famine of 1601–1603
Billy Mitchell Bougainville & Solomon Is. 6 1580
Bárðarbunga Iceland 6 1477
1458 mystery eruption unknown 6-7 1458 Possibly larger than Mount Tambora‘s
1452/1453 mystery eruption Unknown 6-7 1452–53 2nd pulse[27] of Little Ice Age?
Quilotoa Andes, Northern Volcanic Zone 6 1280
Samalas (Mount Rinjani) Lombok, Lesser Sunda Islands 7 1257 1257 Samalas eruption, 1st pulse[28][29] of Little Ice Age? (c.1250)
Baekdu Mountain/Tianchi eruption China/ North Korea border 7 946, Nov-947 Limited regional climatic effects.[30]
Ceboruco Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt 6 930
Dakataua Bismarck Volcanic Arc 6 800
Pago Bismarck Volcanic Arc 6 710
Mount Churchill eastern Alaska, USA 6 700
Rabaul caldera Bismarck Volcanic Arc 6 683 (est.)
Volcanic winter of 536 Krakatoa 6-7 535
Ilopango Central America Volcanic Arc 6 450
Ksudach Kamchatka Peninsula 6 240
Taupō Caldera/Hatepe eruption Taupō Volcano 7 180 or 230 Affected skies over Rome and China
Mount Churchill eastern Alaska, USA 6 60
Ambrym New Hebrides Arc 6 50
Apoyeque Central America Volcanic Arc 6 50 BC (±100)

Note: Caldera names tend to change over time. For example, Ōkataina Caldera, Haroharo Caldera, Haroharo volcanic complex, and Tarawera volcanic complex all had the same magma source in the Taupō Volcanic Zone. Yellowstone Caldera, Henry’s Fork Caldera, Island Park Caldera, Heise Volcanic Field all had Yellowstone hotspot as magma source.

Earlier Quaternary eruptions

2.588 ± 0.005 million years BP, the Quaternary period and Pleistocene epoch begin.

Large Neogene eruptions

Pliocene eruptions

Approximately 5.332 million years BP, the Pliocene epoch begins. Most eruptions before the Quaternary period have an unknown VEI.

Santa Rosa-Calico
Santa Rosa-Calico
Virgin Valley
Virgin Valley
McDermitt
McDermitt
Black Mountain
Black Mountain
Silent Canyon
Silent Canyon
Timber Mountain
Timber Mountain
Stonewall
Stonewall
Long Valley
Long Valley
Lunar Crater
Lunar Crater
Nevada/ California:
Volcanism locations.
Cochetopa
Cochetopa
La Garita
La Garita
Lake City
Lake City
Platoro
Platoro
Dotsero
Dotsero
Colorado volcanism. Links: La Garita, Cochetopa and North Pass (North Pass), Lake City, and Dotsero.
Valles
Valles
Socorro
Socorro
Potrillo
Potrillo
Zuni-Bandera
Zuni-Bandera
Carizzozo
Carizzozo
New Mexico volcanism. Links: Valles, Socorro, Potrillo, Carrizozo, and Zuni-Bandera.

Miocene eruptions

The final eruptions in the creation of Banks Peninsula in New Zealand occurred about 9 million years ago.
A major eruption of Gran Canaria took place around 14 million years ago.

Approximately 23.03 million years BP, the Neogene period and Miocene epoch begin.

  • Cerro Guacha, Bolivia; 5.6–5.8 Ma (Guacha ignimbrite).[61]
  • Lord Howe Island, Australia; Mount Lidgbird and Mount Gower are both made of basalt rock, remnants of lava flows that once filled a large volcanic caldera 6.4 Ma.[62]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Heise volcanic field, Idaho; 5.51 Ma ±0.13 (Conant Creek Tuff).[60]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Heise volcanic field, Idaho; 5.6 Ma; 500 cubic kilometers (120 cu mi) of Blue Creek Tuff.[4]
  • Cerro Panizos (size: 18 km wide), Altiplano-Puna Volcanic Complex, Bolivia; 6.1 Ma; 652 cubic kilometers (156 cu mi) of Panizos Ignimbrite.[4][63]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Heise volcanic field, Idaho; 6.27 Ma ±0.04 (Walcott Tuff).[60]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Heise volcanic field, Idaho; Blacktail Caldera (size: 100 x 60 km), Idaho; 6.62 Ma ±0.03; 1,500 cubic kilometers (360 cu mi) of Blacktail Tuff.[4][60]
  • Pastos Grandes Caldera (size: 40 x 50 km), Altiplano-Puna Volcanic Complex, Bolivia; 8.3 Ma; 652 cubic kilometers (156 cu mi) of Sifon Ignimbrite.[4]
  • Manus Island, Admiralty Islands, northern Papua New Guinea; 8–10 Ma
  • Banks Peninsula, New Zealand; Akaroa erupted 9 Ma, Lyttelton erupted 12 Ma.[64]
  • Mascarene Islands were formed in a series of undersea volcanic eruptions 8–10 Ma, as the African plate drifted over the Réunion hotspot.
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Twin Fall volcanic field, Idaho; 8.6 to 10 Ma.[65]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Grey’s Landing Supereruption, Idaho; 8.72 Ma, 2,800 cubic kilometers (672 cu mi) of Grey’s Landing Ignimbrite.[66]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, McMullen Supereruption, Idaho; 8.99 Ma, 1,700 cubic kilometers (408 cu mi) of volcanic material[66]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Picabo volcanic field, Idaho; 10.21 Ma ± 0.03 (Arbon Valley Tuff).[60]
  • Mount Cargill, New Zealand; the last eruptive phase ended some 10 Ma. The center of the caldera is about Port Chalmers, the main port of the city of Dunedin. Much of the caldera is filled by Otago Harbour.[67][68][69]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Idaho; Bruneau-Jarbidge volcanic field; 10.0 to 12.5 Ma (Ashfall Fossil Beds eruption).[65]
  • Anahim hotspot, British Columbia, Canada; has generated the Anahim Volcanic Belt over the last 13 million years.
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Owyhee-Humboldt volcanic field, Nevada/ Oregon; around 12.8 to 13.9 Ma.[65][70]
  • Tejeda Caldera, Gran Canaria, Spain; 13.9 Ma; the 80 km3 eruption produced a composite ignimbrite (P1) of rhyolite, trachyte and basaltic materials, with a thickness of 30 metres at 10 km from the caldera center[71]
  • Gran Canaria shield basalt eruption, Spain; 14.5 to 14 Ma; 1,000 km3 of tholeiitic to alkali basalts[72]
  • Campi Flegrei, Naples, Italy; 14.9 Ma; 79 cubic kilometers (19 cu mi) of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff.[4]
  • Huaylillas Ignimbrite, Bolivia, southern Peru, northern Chile; 15 Ma ±1; 1,100 cubic kilometers (264 cu mi) of tephra.[4]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, McDermitt volcanic field (North), Trout Creek Mountains, Whitehorse Caldera (size: 15 km wide), Oregon; 15 Ma; 40 cubic kilometers (10 cu mi) of Whitehorse Creek Tuff.[4][73]
  • Yellowstone hotspot (?), Lake Owyhee volcanic field; 15.0 to 15.5 Ma.[74]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, McDermitt volcanic field (South), Jordan Meadow Caldera, (size: 10–15 km wide), Nevada/ Oregon; 15.6 Ma; 350 cubic kilometers (84 cu mi) Longridge Tuff member 2–3.[4][65][73][75]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, McDermitt volcanic field (South), Longridge Caldera, (size: 33 km wide), Nevada/ Oregon; 15.6 Ma; 400 cubic kilometers (96 cu mi) Longridge Tuff member 5.[4][65][73][75]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, McDermitt volcanic field (South), Calavera Caldera, (size: 17 km wide), Nevada/ Oregon; 15.7 Ma; 300 cubic kilometers (72 cu mi) of Double H Tuff.[4][65][73][75]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, McDermitt volcanic field (South), Hoppin Peaks Caldera, 16 Ma; Hoppin Peaks Tuff.[76]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, McDermitt volcanic field (North), Trout Creek Mountains, Pueblo Caldera (size: 20 x 10 km), Oregon; 15.8 Ma; 40 cubic kilometers (10 cu mi) of Trout Creek Mountains Tuff.[4][73][76]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, McDermitt volcanic field (South), Washburn Caldera, (size: 30 x 25 km wide), Nevada/ Oregon; 16.548 Ma; 250 cubic kilometers (60 cu mi) of Oregon Canyon Tuff.[4][73][75]
  • Yellowstone hotspot (?), Northwest Nevada volcanic field (NWNV), Virgin Valley, High Rock, Hog Ranch, and unnamed calderas; West of Pine Forest Range, Nevada; 15.5 to 16.5 Ma.[77]
  • Yellowstone hotspot, Steens and Columbia River flood basalts, Pueblo, Steens, and Malheur Gorge-region, Pueblo Mountains, Steens Mountain, Washington, Oregon, and Idaho, USA; most vigorous eruptions were from 14 to 17 Ma; 180,000 cubic kilometers (43,184 cu mi) of lava.[4][78][79][80][81][82][83][84]
  • Mount Lindesay (New South Wales), Australia; is part of the remnants of the Nandewar extinct volcano that ceased activity about 17 Ma after 4 million years of activity.
  • Oxaya Ignimbrites, northern Chile (around 18°S); 19 Ma; 3,000 cubic kilometers (720 cu mi) of tephra.[4]
  • Pemberton Volcanic Belt was erupting about 21 to 22 Ma.[85]

Volcanism before the Neogene

Distribution of selected hotspots. The numbers in the figure are related to the listed hotspots on Hotspot (geology).

Notes

Volcanic explosivity index (VEI)

VEI and ejecta volume correlation
VEI Tephra Volume
(cubic kilometers)
Example
0 Effusive Masaya Volcano, Nicaragua, 1570
1 >0.00001 Poás Volcano, Costa Rica, 1991
2 >0.001 Mount Ruapehu, New Zealand, 1971
3 >0.01 Nevado del Ruiz, Colombia, 1985
4 >0.1 Eyjafjallajökull, Iceland, 2010
5 >1 Mount St. Helens, United States, 1980
6 >10 Mount Pinatubo, Philippines, 1991
7 >100 Mount Tambora, Indonesia, 1815
8 >1000 Yellowstone Caldera, United States, Pleistocene

Volcanic dimming

The global dimming through volcanism (ash aerosol and sulfur dioxide) is quite independent of the eruption VEI.[104][105][106] When sulfur dioxide (boiling point at standard state: -10 °C) reacts with water vapor, it creates sulfate ions (the precursors to sulfuric acid), which are very reflective; ash aerosol on the other hand absorbs ultraviolet.[107] Global cooling through volcanism is the sum of the influence of the global dimming and the influence of the high albedo of the deposited ash layer.[108] The lower snow line and its higher albedo might prolong this cooling period.[109] Bipolar comparison showed six sulfate events: Tambora (1815), Cosigüina (1835), Krakatoa (1883), Agung (1963), and El Chichón (1982), and the 1808 mystery eruption.[110] And the atmospheric transmission of direct solar radiation data from the Mauna Loa Observatory (MLO), Hawaii (19°32’N) detected only five eruptions:[111]

****

From:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_large_volcanic_eruptions

VEI Volcano/complex Volcanic arc/belt,
subregion, or hotspot
Material volume (km³) Age in Ka[1] Tephra or eruption name
6 Lolobau Island Bismarck Volcanic Arc 50 12 caldera formation
6 Menengai Great Rift Valley, Kenya < 25 12.3 Ruplax Tuff
6 Nevado de Toluca Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt 20 12.5 Upper Toluca Pumice
6 Sakurajima Kyūshū 11 12.8 Sakurajima-Satsuma Tuff
6 Laacher See Eifel hotspot 20 12.9
6 Nigorigawa Hokkaidō 10.9 14.6
6 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc 79 14.9 Neapolitan Yellow Tuff
6 Maly Semyachik Kamchatka 17.5 15
6 Towada Honshū 56 15.6 eruption episode L
7 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc Un­known 15.7
5 Mount Vesuvius Campanian volcanic arc 1.3 19.3 Green Pumice
7 Long Island, PNG Bismarck Volcanic Arc 100 19.3 Kiau Ignimbrite
7 Zavaritzki Caldera Simushir, Kuril Islands 200 20
6 Rabaul Bismarck Volcanic Arc >10 21 Kulau Ignimbrite
6 Menengai Great Rift Valley, Kenya 26.1 21 Caldera formation 2
6 Cape Riva Caldera, Santorini South Aegean Volcanic Arc >20 21.8 Cape Riva
5 Mount Vesuvius Campanian volcanic arc 1.9 22 Basal Pumice
6 Mount Katmai SW Alaska, Aleutian Arc ⩾10 22.8 Late Pleistocene rhyodacite pumice fall and ignimbrite
8 Taupō Volcano Taupō Volcanic Zone 1170 26.5 Oruanui eruption[a]
6 Morne Diablotins Dominica, Lesser Antilles island arc 14 26.6 Grand Savanne Ignimbrite
? Laguna Caldera Luzon Volcanic Arc Un­known 27-29
5 Mount Vesuvius Campanian volcanic arc 2.2 28.6 Codola Pumice
6 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc ≥10 29.1 Y3
6 Emmons Lake caldera SW Alaska, Aleutian Arc 50 29.3 Dawson Tephra
6 Nemrut yanardağı Turkey 65.4 29.7
7-8 Aira Caldera Kyūshū 940 – 1,040[2] 30[3] Ito Ignimbrite
6 Nemo Peak Onekotan, Kuril Islands 10 30.8 Nemo III
6 Shiveluch Kamchatka >30 32.2 caldera formation
6 Volcán Los Azufres Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt 11 32.8 Cieneguillas Ignimbrite
6 Morne Trois Pitons Dominica, Lesser Antilles island arc 58 33.3 Roseau Tuff/Ignimbrite
7 Lake Ranau Sunda Arc, Sumatra 150 33.6 Ranau Tuff
6 Nemo Peak Onekotan, Kuril Islands 31.3 34 Nemo II
6 Mount Batur Sunda Arc, Bali 84 34.6 Ubud Ignimbrite
6 Ksudach Kamchatka 25 35 Caldera II
6 Lake Mashū Hokkaidō 10 35.3[4] Nu-p
6 Menengai Great Rift Valley, Kenya 26.1 35.6 Menengai Tuff
6 Towada Honshū 46 36 eruption episode N
6 Lake Mashū Hokkaidō 10 38.3[4] Nu-r
7 Gorely Kamchatka 120 39 Southern sea cliffs
7 Kussharo Hokkaidō 170 39.3 Kp-1, Kutcharo Shoro Ash
7 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc 430 – 680 39.9 Campanian Ignimbrite Eruption
5 Galeras Andes, Northern Volcanic Zone Un­known 40
6 Ksudach Kamchatka 40 40 Caldera I
6 Ugashik-Peulik SW Alaska, Aleutian Arc 30 40 Caldera formation
6? Ulleung South Korea 10? 40[3] Ulleungdo-Yamato tephra
6 Irosin Caldera BicolLeyte Volcanic Arc 70 41 Irosin Ignimbrites
6 Qualibou Saint Lucia, Lesser Antilles island arc 11 42.3 Choiseul Tuff
6 Mount St. Helens Cascade Volcanic Arc 10.3 42.5 C (Cs, Cy, Cm, Cw, Ct) (Ape Canyon)
6 Kuttara Hokkaidō 14.4 DRE[4] 43[6] Kt-1
7 Uzon-Geyzernaya calderas Kamchatka 150 43.6 Uzon ignimbrite – northern field
6 Golovnin Kunashir, Kuril Islands 15 43.7 Kn III-5 Tephra
6 Mount Akagi Honshū 25.9 44 Akagi-Kanuma pumice
6 Mendeleev Kunashir, Kuril Islands 60 44.5 caldera formation
7 Opala Kamchatka 225 44.5 caldera formation
5-6 Naruko Honshū 5 – 10[4] 45 Yanagisawa Tuff
7 Nemo Peak Onekotan, Kuril Islands >115 45 Nemo I
6 Smith Island Izu–Bonin–Mariana Arc 49 45
7 Shikotsu Hokkaidō 350 – 390[7] 46 caldera formation

50 to 99KA

VEI Volcano/complex Volcanic arc/belt,
subregion, or hotspot
Material volume (km³) Age in Ka[8] Tephra or eruption name
6 Kuttara Hokkaidō 10.2 DRE 50 Kt-2
7 Ōkataina Volcanic Complex Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 50 Rotoiti Ignimbrite
6 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc 13.1 51 Santa Lucia Tephra
7 Lake Maninjau Sunda Arc, Sumatra 235 52 Maninjau paroxysmal welded and unwelded tuffs
6 Mount Kujū Kyūshū 12[9] 53.5 Kuju-Handa pyroclastic flow (Kj-Hd), Kuju-1 Pumice (Kj-P1)
6 Skaros Caldera, Santorini South Aegean Volcanic Arc 13.75 54 Upper Scoriae 2
6 Kuttara Hokkaidō 20.1 DRE 50 – 60 Kt-3
6 Ischia Campanian volcanic arc ≥ 10 56 X2
6 Ischia Campanian volcanic arc 40 56 Monte Epomeo Green Tuff
6 Daisen Honshū 40 59.6[3] Daisen-Kurayoshi Pumice
6 Shikotsu Hokkaidō 50 60 Shadai eruption
6 Towada Honshū 10 61 eruption episode Q
6 Newberry Volcano Cascade Volcanic Arc > 12.5 62.5 Olema tephra, Paulina tephra
6 Hakone Honshū 20 66 Hakone-Tokyo Pumice
6 Akademia Nauk Kamchatka 12.5 69.4 Odnoboky O2 tuffs
6 Los Humeros Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt 37 69 Zaragoza Tuff
6 Los Humeros Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt 24 70 Faby Tuff
6 Pico do Fogo Cape Verde 73
5-6 Naruko Honshū 5 – 10 73 Nisaka Tuff
8 Lake Toba Caldera Sunda Arc, Sumatra 2800 (DRE) – 13,200[10] 74 Youngest Toba Tuff[b]
6 Barrier Volcano Great Rift Valley, Kenya 10 74 caldera formation
6 Kuttara Hokkaidō > 11 DRE 75 Kt-4
6 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc 12.35 80 CA-1a Tephra
6 Bolshoy Semyachik Kamchatka 42 80 Bol’shoi Semiachik Caldera II
6 Hakone Honshū 10 80 Hakone-Obaradai Pumice
7? Mount Pinatubo Luzon Volcanic Arc 25 81 Inararo Tuff
6 Etna Campanian volcanic arc 10 82.8 X4; I-7
7-8 Lago de Atitlán Central America Volcanic Arc, Guatemala 300 84 Los Chocoyos eruption
6 Kuttara Hokkaidō 16.8 DRE 84 Kt-6
6 Kussharo Hokkaidō 25 85 Kp-2/3
6 Kuttara Hokkaidō 10.8 DRE 84 – 87 Kt-7
7-8 Mount Aso Kyūshū 930 – 1,860[2] 87 Aso-4 Ignimbrite
6 Kuttara Hokkaidō 9.9 DRE 87 – 106 Kt-8

100 to 299KA

VEI Volcano/complex Volcanic arc/belt,
subregion, or hotspot
Material volume (km³) Age in Ka[12] Tephra or eruption name
7 Kikai Caldera Ryukyu Islands Un­known 100 Tozurahara eruption
6 Sierra la Primavera Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt 90 100 Tala Tuff
6 Skaros Caldera, Santorini South Aegean Volcanic Arc 14 100 Middle Pumice
6 Ontake Honshū 50 100 Ontake-1 Pumice
6 Rabaul Bismarck Volcanic Arc 10? 100 Boroi Ignimbrites
6 Rabaul Bismarck Volcanic Arc 10? 100 Malaguna Pyroclastics
7 Ata Caldera Kyūshū 350 100[3] Ata pyroclastic deposits
6 Sanbe Honshū 20 105 Sanbe-Kisuki pumice
6 Tangkuban Perahu Sunda Arc, Java ≥ 10 105 Sunda Caldera
7 Lake Tōya Hokkaidō 230 – 310[2] 106
6 Santo Antão Cape Verde 10.33 106 Cão Grande I
6 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc ≥ 10 106.2 X5
6 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc ≥ 10 108.9 X6
7 Kussharo Hokkaidō 175 117.5 Kp-4, Kutcharo Haboro Ash
7 Emmons Lake caldera SW Alaska, Aleutian Arc 220 124 Old Craw Tephra
7 Mount Aso Kyūshū > 150 130 Aso-3 Ignimbrite
6 Mount Aso Kyūshū 50 141 Aso-2 Ignimbrite
6 Yellowstone Caldera Yellowstone hotspot 23? 143 Cold Mountain Creek Tuff
7 Calabozos Andes, Southern Volcanic Zone Un­known 150 Loma Seca Tuff-Unit S
5 Galeras Andes, Northern Volcanic Zone Un­known 150
7 Kos-Nisyros Caldera South Aegean Volcanic Arc 110 161 Kos Plateau Tuff
7 Los Humeros Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt 290 DRE[13] 164 Xáltipan Ignimbrite
7 Lake Akan Hokkaidō 56.8 (DRE) 175 AK-2
6 Yellowstone Caldera Yellowstone hotspot 50 176 Bluff Point Tuff
7 Southern Caldera, Santorini South Aegean Volcanic Arc Un­known 180
7 Awasa Caldera Main Ethiopian Rift 103.5 182.3
7 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc Un­known 205
7 Rotorua Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 230 Mamaku Ignimbrite
7 Maroa Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 230 Ohakuri Ignimbrite
7 Reporoa Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 230 Kaingaroa Ignimbrite
7 Ata Caldera Kyūshū > 150 240 Torihama eruption
7 Kapenga Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 240 Ohakui Ignimbrite
7 O’a Caldera Ethiopia 276 240 Qi3 Pumice
8 Maroa Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 254 Whakamaru Ignimbrite
6 Mount Aso Kyūshū Un­known 266 Aso-1 Ignimbrite
6 Uzon-Geyzernaya calderas Kamchatka 46 278 Uzon ignimbrite – southern field
7 Haroharo Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 280 Matahina Ignimbrite
7 Kapenga Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 280 Pakai Ignimbrite
7 Lake Maninjau Sunda Arc, Sumatra 175 280

300 to 999KA

VEI Volcano/complex Volcanic arc/belt,
subregion, or hotspot
Material volume (km³) Age in Ka[14] Tephra or eruption name
7 Calabozos Andes, Southern Volcanic Zone Un­known 300 Loma Seca Tuff-Unit V
7 Kapenga Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 300 Chimpanzee Ignimbrite
7 Vulsini Campanian volcanic arc 460 300 Bolsena Caldera
7 Phlegraean Fields Campanian volcanic arc Un­known 320
7 Kakutō Caldera Kyūshū Un­known 321 Kakuto Ignimbrite
7? Suiendani Honshū Un­known 370 Okuhida Pyroclastics
7 Lake Bracciano Lazio, Italy > 200 370 Mophi Tephra
6 Roccamonfina Caldera Campanian volcanic arc Un­known 390
6-7 Medvezhia Iturup, Kuril Islands 90 410 Medvezhia Ignimbrite
7 Toussidé Tibesti Mountains 150 430 Yirrigué Ignimbrite
7 Pauzhetka Caldera Kamchatka 375 440 Golygin Ignimbrite
7 Tumalo Oregon Un­known 440 Tumalo tuff
7 Aira Caldera Kyūshū Un­known 450 Oda Ignimbrite
7 Diamante Caldera Andes, Southern Volcanic Zone Un­known 450
7 Aira Caldera Kyūshū Un­known 500 Yoshino Ignimbrite
7 Toba Caldera Sunda Arc, Sumatra 138 500 Middle Toba Tuff
7 Kobayashi Caldera Kyūshū Un­known 520 Kobayashi Ignimbrite
6 Galeras Andes, Northern Volcanic Zone Un­known 560
7 Mount Kirishima Kyūshū Un­known 580 Hiwaki Ignimbrite
6? Hōhi Volcanic Zone Kyūshū Un­known 600 Yufugawa Ignimbrite
6 Mount Lassen Cascade Volcanic Arc > 75 610 Rockland Caldera formation
8 Yellowstone Plateau Volcanic Field Yellowstone hotspot ⩾ 1,000 631 Lava Creek Tuff
7 Acatlán Volcanic Field Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt 150 650 Acatlán Ignimbrite
7 Hōhi Volcanic Zone Kyūshū Un­known 650 Seiganji-Toga Tephra
7 Kamitakara Honshū Un­known 650
7 Kapenga Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 680 Matahana A
7 Kapenga Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 710 Waiotapu Ignimbrite
7 Long Valley Caldera Eastern California 790 760 Bishop Tuff
7 Kapenga Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 830 Matahana B
7 Calabozos Andes, Southern Volcanic Zone Un­known 840 Loma Seca Tuff-Unit L
8 Lake Toba Caldera Sunda Arc, Sumatra 5,290[10] 840 Toba Tuff
7 Shishimuta Caldera Kyūshū Un­known 870 Imaichi Ignimbrite
7 Tondano Caldera North Sulawesi, Sulawesi 600 – 950 870
7 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 950 Marshall Ignimbrite
7 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 970 Unit E

1 to 9.9MA

VEI Volcano/complex Volcanic arc/belt,
subregion, or hotspot
Material volume (km³) Age in Ma[15] Tephra or eruption name
7 North Vate Vanuatu Un­known 1 Efaté Pumice Formation
7 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 1 Rocky Hill Ignimbrite
7 Shishimuta Caldera Kyūshū Un­known 1 Yabakei Ignimbrite
7 Tamagawa Caldera Honshū Un­known 1
7 Tōnohetsuri Calderas Honshū Un­known 1 Saigō Ignimbrite
7 Tokachi-Mitsumata Caldera Hokkaidō > 130 1
8 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 1.01 Kidnappers Ignimbrite
8 Awasa Caldera Main Ethiopian Rift 1,000 1.09
8 Gakkel Ridge Caldera Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean 3000 1.1
7 Akademia Nauk Kamchatka 100 1.13 Stena-Soboliny Ignimbrite
7 Kulshan Caldera Cascade Volcanic Arc > 117.5 1.149 Lake Tapps Tephra, Swift Creek Ignimbrite, Kulshan caldera formation
7 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 1.18 Ahuroa Ignimbrite
7 Hōhi Volcanic Zone Kyūshū Un­known 1.2 Shikido Ignimbrite
6 Toba Caldera Sunda Arc, Sumatra Un­known 1.2 Haranggoal Dacite Tuff
7 Tōnohetsuri Calderas Honshū Un­known 1.2 Ashino Ignimbrite
7 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 1.2 Unit D
8 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 1.21 Ongatiti Ignimbrite
7 Valles Caldera New Mexico, USA
(Raton hotspot)
690 1.223 Upper Bandelier Tuff
7 Yellowstone Plateau Volcanic Field Yellowstone hotspot > 280 (DRE) 1.27 Mesa Falls Tuff
7 Puricó Complex Andes, Central Volcanic Zone Un­known 1.3 Puricó Ignimbrite
7 Tōnohetsuri Calderas Honshū Un­known 1.4 Kumado Ignimbrite
7 Mount Tokachi Hokkaidō Un­known 1.4 Tokachi Ignimbrite
7 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 1.4 Unit C
7 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 1.53 Unit B
7 Mangakino Caldera Taupō Volcanic Zone Un­known 1.55 Unit A
7 Mount Jiigatake[16] Honshū Un­known 1.6 Ōmine Ignimbrite
7 Valles Caldera New Mexico, USA 690 1.61 Lower Bandelier Tuff
7 Mount Jiigatake Honshū Un­known 1.65
6 Cerro Guacha Altiplano-Puna volcanic complex Un­known 1.7 Puripica Ch0ico ignimbrite
7 Young Island Valleny Islands 100 1.7 Eltanin
7 Bolshe-Bannaya Kamchatka 800 1.705
7 Mount Hotakadake[16] Honshū Un­known 1.75 Ebisutōge-Fukuda tephras
7 Mount Hotakadake Honshū Un­known 1.76 Nyūkawa Ignimbrite
7 Valles Caldera New Mexico, USA ⩾ 100 1.78 San Diego Canyon Ignimbrite
7 Karymshina Kamchatka Un­known 1.78
7 Lago de Atitlán Central America Volcanic Arc, Guatemala Un­known 1.8
7 Mount Jiigatake Honshū Un­known 1.88 Kitazawa Ignimbrite
7 Mount Tokachi Hokkaidō Un­known 1.9 Biei Ignimbrite
7 Mount Jiigatake Honshū Un­known 2 Reishōji Ignimbrite
7 Mount Jiigatake Honshū Un­known 2 Ht-3 Ignimbrite
7 Mount Jiigatake Honshū Un­known 2 Nyūnomi Ignimbrite
7 Mount Jiigatake Honshū Un­known 2 Ichiuda Ignimbrite
7 Mount Hotakadake Honshū Un­known 2 Sonehara Ignimbrite
7 Tamagawa Caldera Honshū Un­known 2
8 Yellowstone Plateau Volcanic Field Yellowstone hotspot 2,160 2.0794 Huckleberry Ridge Tuff A & B
7 Yellowstone Plateau Volcanic Field Yellowstone hotspot 290 2.113 Huckleberry Ridge Tuff C
7 Mount Jiigatake[16] Honshū Un­known 2.18 Taniguchi Ignimbrite
8 Cerro Galán Andes, Central Volcanic Zone 1030 2.2 Cerro Galán Ignimbrite
7? Mount Erciyes Turkey Un­known 2.52 Valibabatepe Ignimbrite
^^^^Quaternary^^^^
7 Hiwada Caldera Honshū Un­known 2.8 Hotokezawa Ignimbrite
8 Pastos Grandes Caldera Andes, Central Volcanic Zone 1500 2.9 Pastos Grandes Ignimbrite
7 Teragi Cauldron Honshū Un­known 3.03 Teragi Group[17]
7 Cerro Guacha Altiplano-Puna volcanic complex Un­known 3.5 Tara Ignimbrite
7 Yunosawa Caldera Honshū Un­known 3.5 Obirakiyama Tuff
8 Pacana Caldera Andes, Central Volcanic Zone 2800 4 Atana Ignimbrite
8 Heise volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 4.45 Kilgore Tuff
? Heise volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 5.51 Conant Creek Tuff
8 Cerro Guacha Altiplano-Puna volcanic complex 1300 5.7 Guacha ignimbrite
7 Cerro Panizos Andes, Central Volcanic Zone Un­known 6.1 Panizos Ignimbrite
? Heise volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 6.27 Walcott Tuff
8 Heise volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 6.62 Blacktail Tuff
7 Black Mountain Caldera Southwest Nevada volcanic field Un­known 7 Thirsty Canyon Tuff
7 Pastos Grandes Caldera or Vilama Caldera Andes, Central Volcanic Zone Un­known 8.3 Sifon Ignimbrite
? Twin Falls volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 10-8.6
8 Grey’s Landing Supereruption Yellowstone hotspot >2,800[18] 8.72 Grey’s Landing Ignimbrite
8 McMullen Supereruption Yellowstone hotspot >1,700[18] 8.99 McMullen Ignimbrite

10MA and older

VEI Volcano/complex Volcanic arc/belt,
subregion, or hotspot
Material volume (km³) Age in Ma[19] Tephra or eruption name
? Picabo volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 10 – 10.2 Arbon Valley Tuffs
7-8 Bruneau-Jarbidge caldera Yellowstone hotspot
950
10 – 12.5 Ashfall Fossil Beds eruption
7 Timber Mountain caldera complex Southwest Nevada volcanic field Un­known 11.45 Timber Mountain Tuff – Ammonia Tanks member
8 Timber Mountain caldera complex Southwest Nevada volcanic field Un­known 11.6 Timber Mountain Tuff – Rainer Mesa member
8 Paintbrush Caldera Southwest Nevada volcanic field Un­known 12.7 Paintbrush Tuff – Topopah Spring member
8 Paintbrush Caldera Southwest Nevada volcanic field Un­known 12.8 Paintbrush Tuff – Tiva Canyon member
7 Mount Sobo Kyūshū Un­known 12.8
? Owyhee-Humboldt volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 13.9-12.8
7 Mount Katamuki Kyūshū Un­known 13
7 Silent Canyon caldera complex Southwest Nevada volcanic field Un­known 13 Belted Range Tuff
7 Crater Flat Group Southwest Nevada volcanic field Un­known 13.25 Crater Flat Tuff, Bullfrog member
7 Shitara Caldera Honshū Un­known 15.1-13.1
8 Ōdai Caldera Honshū Un­known 13.7 Murō Ignimbrite
8 Mount Ōkue Kyūshū Un­known 13.7 Okueyama volcano-plutonic complex
7 Mount Ishizuchi Shikoku Un­known 14
8 Kumano Caldera Honshū Un­known 14.4 Kumano Acidic rocks
8 Source unknown Andes, Central Volcanic Zone
1100
15 Huaylillas Ignimbrite
7 McDermitt volcanic field, North Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 15 Whitehorse Creek Tuff
? Lake Owyhee volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot? Un­known 15.5-15
8 Mount Osuzu Kyūshū Un­known 15.1 Osuzuyama volcano-plutonic complex
? Northwest Nevada volcanic field Yellowstone hotspot? Un­known 16.5-15.5
7 McDermitt volcanic field, South Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 15.6 Longridge Tuff member 2-3
7 McDermitt volcanic field, South Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 15.6 Longridge Tuff member 5
7 McDermitt volcanic field, South Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 15.7 Double H Tuff
7 McDermitt volcanic field, North Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 15.8 Trout Creek Mountains Tuff
? McDermitt volcanic field, South Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 16 Hoppin Peaks Tuff
7 McDermitt volcanic field, South Yellowstone hotspot Un­known 16.5 Oregon Canyon Tuff
8 Oxaya Formation Andes, Central Volcanic Zone
3000
19 Oxaya Ignimbrite
7 Mount Belknap Caldera Marysvale volcanic field Un­known 19 Joe Lott member
^^^^Neogene^^^^
7 Monroe Peak Caldera Marysvale volcanic field Un­known 23 Osiris Tuff
8 La Garita Caldera San Juan volcanic field
5000
27.8 Fish Canyon Tuff[c]
8? Bachelor San Juan volcanic field
1000
28 Carpenter Ridge Tuff
8 San Juan San Juan volcanic field Un­known 28 Sapinero Mesa Tuff
8? Uncompahgre San Juan volcanic field
1000
28.1 Dillon & Sapinero Mesa Tuffs
8? Platoro San Juan volcanic field
1000
28.2 Chiquito Peak Tuff
8 Bursum Southern New Mexico Un­known 28.5 Apache Springs Tuff
8 White Rock Caldera Indian Peak-Caliente Caldera Complex Un­known 29.2 Lund Tuff
8 Sana’a Ignimbrite Afro-Arabian Un­known 29.5 Tephra 2W63
8 Iftar Alkalb Afro-Arabian Un­known 29.5 Tephra 4 W
8 Sam Ignimbrite Yemen Un­known 29.5 Green Tuff
8 Jabal Kura’a Ignimbrite Yemen Un­known 29.6
8 Wah Wah Springs Caldera Indian Peak-Caliente Caldera Complex
5900
30.06 Wah Wah Springs Tuff[d]
8 Windows Butte Tuff Central Nevada Un­known 33 Windows Butte Tuff
8 Emory Caldera Southwestern New Mexico Un­known 34.9 Kneeling Nun Tuff, City of Rocks State Park
8 Mount Princeton Thirtynine Mile volcanic area, Colorado Un­known 35.3 Wall Mountain Tuff
7 Bennett Lake Volcanic Complex Skukum Group Un­known 50
^^^^Paleogene^^^^
8 Deccan Traps West-central India Un­known 66 This volcanic episode occurred about 300,000 years after the Chicxulub meteor impact, and may have been another contributing factor towards the extinction of the dinosaurs
8 Source unknown Honshū Un­known 70 Noi Rhyolite
8 Ontong-Java-Manihiki-Hikurangi Plateau Southwestern Pacific Ocean, north of the Solomon Islands Un­known 121 Existence as a single volcano is controversial. Possibly a volcanic chain.
8 Guarapuava-Tamarana-Sarusas Paraná and Etendeka traps Un­known 132 Existence as a single volcano is controversial. Possibly a volcanic chain.
8 Santa Maria Fria Paraná and Etendeka traps Un­known 132 Existence as a single volcano is controversial. Possibly a volcanic chain.
8 Guarapuava-Ventura Paraná and Etendeka traps Un­known 132 Existence as a single volcano is controversial. Possibly a volcanic chain.
8 High Island Caldera Hong Kong Un­known 140
^^^^Cretaceous^^^^
8 Ora Caldera Southern Alps, Italy Un­known 277–274 Ora Formation
7 Altenberg–Teplice Caldera[20] The Altenberg-Teplice Volcanic Complex Un­known 325-317[20] Teplice Rhyolite intra-caldera deposits
8 Cerberean Caldera Rubicon Valley Un­known 374[21] Cerberean Caldera now forms the northern part of the Marysville Igneous Complex in central Victoria at Lake Eildon National Park.[21][22]
8 Glen Coe Scotland Un­known 420[23]
8 Scafells Lake District Un­known 450+[24]

******************

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_large_volume_volcanic_eruptions_in_the_Basin_and_Range_Province

Large volume volcanic eruptions in the Basin and Range Province include Basin and Range eruptions in Utah, California, Idaho, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, Arizona, Nevada, Wyoming and Oregon, as well as those of the Long Valley Caldera geological province and the Yellowstone hotspot.

Volcanic fields

Some of the volcanic fields within the Basin and Range Province: Northwestern Nevada, the Modoc Plateau, Central Nevada, the Great Basin, Southwestern Nevada, the Mojave Desert, and the Long Valley Caldera region. Named ones include: Coso Volcanic Field, Mono Lake Volcanic Field, Marysvale Volcanic Field, San Juan volcanic field, Indian Peak, Central Colorado volcanic field, Jemez volcanic lineament, Mogollon-Datil volcanic field, Santa Rosa-Calico, and Boot Heel volcanic field.

Geological features

Many geological features in Western United States have a Northeastern orientation, the North American craton motion has the same orientation as well.[1] For example: the Trans-Challis fault zone, Idaho; the Snake River in Oregon; the Garlock Fault, California; the Colorado River in Utah; the Colorado Mineral Belt; Crater FlatReveille RangeLunar Crater lineament, the Northwestern Nevada volcanic field; the San Juan caldera cluster, Colorado; the Socorro-Magdalena caldera cluster, New Mexico; Jemez volcanic lineament (Raton hotspot trail); and the Yellowstone hotspot trail. But the Yellowstone hotspot trail was modified through faults and extension.

Geology

Prior to the Eocene Epoch (55.8 ± 0.2 to 33.9 ± 0.1 Ma) the convergence rate of the Farallon and North American Plates was fast and the angle of subduction was shallow. During the Eocene the Farallon Plate subduction-associated compressive forces of the Laramide orogeny ended, plate interactions changed from orthogonal compression to oblique strike-slip, and volcanism in the Basin and Range Province flared up. It is suggested that this plate continued to be underthrust until about 19 Ma, at which time it was completely consumed and volcanic activity ceased, in part. Olivine basalt from the oceanic ridge erupted around 17 Ma and extension began.[2][3][4][5][6] The extension resulted in roughly north-south-trending faults, the Great Basin, the Walker trough, the Owens graben, and the Rio Grande rift, for instance.

List of large volume eruptions in the Basin and Range Province

The large volume eruptions in the Basin and Range Province include:

Large volume eruptions of the Southwestern Nevada volcanic field (SWNVF)
Caldera name State (volcanic field) age size
Black Mountain Caldera (18 km wide) Nevada (SWNVF) 7 Ma ±1 300 km3 (72 cu mi) of Thirsty Canyon Tuff.[8][24]
Timber Mountain caldera complex (30 km × 25 km (19 mi × 16 mi)) Nevada (SWNVF) 11.45 Ma 900 km3 (220 cu mi) of Timber Mountain Tuff – Ammonia Tanks member.[8][34]
Timber Mountain caldera complex Nevada (SWNVF) 11.6 Ma 1,200 km3 (290 cu mi) of Timber Mountain Tuff – Rainer Mesa member.[8][34]
Paintbrush Caldera (20 km (12 mi) wide) Nevada (SWNVF) 12.7 Ma 1,000 km3 (240 cu mi) of Paintbrush Tuff – Topopah Spring member.[8][34]
Paintbrush Caldera Nevada (SWNVF) 12.8 Ma 1,200 km3 (288 cu mi) of Paintbrush Tuff – Tiva Canyon member[8][34]
Silent Canyon Caldera (20 km × 16 km (12.4 mi × 9.9 mi)) Nevada (SWNVF) 13 Ma 200 km3 (48 cu mi).[8][24]
Crater Flat Group Nevada (SWNVF) 13.25 Ma 650 km3 (156 cu mi) of Belted Range Tuff[8]

List of Rupelian calderas

The Rupelian age/stage (Paleogene period/system, Oligocene epoch/series) spans the time between 33.9 ±0.1 Ma and 28.4 ±0.1 Ma (million years ago).