Status Report

NASA MODIS Image of the Day: September 22, 2007 – Plume from Chikurachki Volcano

By SpaceRef Editor
September 22, 2007
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NASA MODIS Image of the Day: September 22, 2007 – Plume from Chikurachki Volcano
NASA MODIS Image of the Day: September 22, 2007 - Plume from Chikurachki Volcano

Images

Chikurachki Volcano, in the northern Kurile Islands, off the coast of Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula, released another plume of ash and/or steam on September 19, 2007, continuing a pattern of intermittent activity.

You can see the plume it left of on September 8 here.

The MODIS on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this picture the same day. In this image, a tan colored plume blows away from the volcano’s summit toward the southeast, over the Pacific Ocean. To the east, bright white clouds form a line roughly parallel to the volcanic plume, likely blown by the same winds. Chikurachki is a stratovolcano composed of hardened lava, solidified ash, and volcanic rocks. This volcano is actually a relatively small cone sitting atop an older structure that was built by volcanic activity in the Pleistocene. The underlying edifice makes Chikurachki, with a summit elevation of 1,816 meters (5,958 feet) the highest volcano on Paramushir Island.

SpaceRef staff editor.