Mount Griggs
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Mount Griggs, formerly known as Knife Peak Volcano, is a stratovolcano, which lies 10 km behind the volcanic arc defined by other Katmai group volcanoes. Although no historic eruptions have been reported from Mount Griggs, vigorously active fumaroles persist in a summit crater and along the upper southwest flank. The fumaroles on the southwest flank are the hottest, and some of the flank fumaroles can roar so loudly that they can be heard from the valley floor.[1] The slopes of Mount Griggs are heavily mantled by fallout from the 1912 eruption of Novarupta volcano.[2] The summit consists of three concentric craters, the lowest and largest of which contains a recent summit cone topped by two craters. The volume of the volcanic edifice is estimated at Template:Convert. Isotopic analysis indicates that the source of Griggs' magma is distinct from the other Katmai volcanoes.[3]
The mountain was named for Dr. Robert Fiske Griggs (1881–1962), botanist, whose explorations of the area, after the eruption of Mount Katmai in 1912, led to the creation of Katmai National Monument by President Woodrow Wilson in 1918.[4]
See also
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- List of mountain peaks of North America
- List of Ultras of the United States
- List of volcanoes in the United States
References
External links
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- Volcanoes of the Alaska Peninsula and Aleutian Islands-Selected Photographs
- Mount Griggs at the Alaska Volcano Observatory
- Mount Griggs at the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Project
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- Volcanoes of Lake and Peninsula Borough, Alaska
- Stratovolcanoes of Alaska
- Two-thousanders of the United States
- Katmai National Park and Preserve
- Aleutian Range
- Mountains of Lake and Peninsula Borough, Alaska
- Highest points of United States national parks
- Pleistocene stratovolcanoes
- Holocene stratovolcanoes
- Dormant volcanoes
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