Cagua Volcano | |||
Other Name: | Kagwa Volcano | ||
Elevation M: | 1133 | ||
Elevation Ref: | [1] | ||
Range: | Sierra Madre | ||
Country: | Philippines | ||
State: | Cagayan Valley | ||
State Type: | Region | ||
Region: | Cagayan | ||
Region Type: | Province | ||
Settlement: | Gonzaga | ||
Settlement Type: | City/municipality | ||
Map: | Luzon#Philippines | ||
Label: | Cagua Volcano | ||
Coordinates: | 18.2217°N 122.1233°W | ||
Type: | Stratovolcano | ||
Volcanic Arc: | Babuyan (Bashi) Segment of Luzon-Taiwan Arc | ||
Age: | Pleistocene | ||
Last Eruption: | October 1907 | ||
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Cagua Volcano is a stratovolcano located in the Philippine province of Cagayan. It is one of the active volcanoes in the Philippines and has erupted twice in recorded history. Its last eruption was in 1907.
Cagua is one of the active volcanoes in the Philippines located in the province of Cagayan in the Cagayan Valley Region of northern Luzon in the northernmost part of the Sierra Madre mountain range.[2] The mountain is approximately south of Gonzaga, Cagayan and south of Port Irene in Santa Ana, Cagayan.
Activity of the early Pleistocene erupted basaltic andesite or effusive basalt. The volcano was covered by enormous lava flows from 600,000 to 300,000 years ago. It has seen activity ranging from phreatic eruptions to ash flows. The volcano is topped by a 1.5km (00.9miles) wide crater marked by sharp and precipitous walls.
It has six hot springs. Maasok near the crater; Marafil in the northwest; Manaring, north-northeast; San Jose, 10km (10miles) north-northeast; Kabinlangan, 3km (02miles) northwest and Paminta, 2km (01miles) north-northwest.[3]
Two historical eruptions have taken place at the volcano. Activity in 1860 was a largely phreatic eruption though it was possibly followed by a pyroclastic flow. Renewed eruptions took place in October 1907 .[3]