Cinder Mountain Explained

Cinder Mountain
Elevation M:300
Location:British Columbia, Canada
Range:Boundary Ranges
Type:Cinder cone
Age:Pleistocene
Last Eruption:Pleistocene

Cinder Mountain is a partly eroded cinder cone at the head of Snippaker Creek, British Columbia, Canada. It is one of the Iskut-Unuk River Cones and is the source of a basaltic lava flow that extends 40NaN0 north into Copper King Creek. An isolated pile of subaerial basalt flows and associated pillow lava rest on varved clay and till in King Creek. Cinder Mountain last erupted during the Pleistocene.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Geological Survey of Canada, Open File 2225. Natural Resources Canada. 40–. GGKEY:1R1WRWJJ0YU.