Scientific Investigations Map 2832
Version 1.0
Geologic Map of Mount Mazama and Crater Lake Caldera, Oregon
By Charles R. Bacon
Including the Database for the Geologic Map of Mount Mazama and Crater Lake Caldera, Oregon by David W. Ramsey, Dillon R. Dutton, and Charles R. Bacon
2008
Crater Lake – Wizard Island
View from the south-southwest rim of Crater Lake caldera showing the caldera wall from Hillman Peak on the west to Cleetwood Cove on the north. Crater Lake fills half of the 8- by 10-km-diameter caldera formed during the climactic eruption of Mount Mazama volcano approximately 7,700 years ago. Volcanic rocks exposed in the caldera walls and on the flanks record over 400,000 years of eruptive history. The exposed cinder cone and andesite lava flows on Wizard Island represent only 2 percent of the total volume of postcaldera volcanic rock that is largely covered by Crater Lake. Beyond Wizard Island, the great cliff of Llao Rock, rhyodacite lava emplaced 100-200 years before the caldera-forming eruption, dominates the northwest caldera wall where andesite lava flows at the lakeshore are approximately 150,000 years old (Photograph by Charles R. Bacon)
Introduction
Crater Lake partly fills one of the most spectacular calderas of the world, an 8-by-10-km basin more than 1 km deep formed by collapse of the volcano known as Mount Mazama (fig. 1) during a rapid series of explosive eruptions about 7,700 years ago. Having a maximum depth of 594 m, Crater Lake is the deepest lake in the United States. Crater Lake National Park, dedicated in 1902, encompasses 645 km2 of pristine forested and alpine terrain, including the lake itself, virtually all of Mount Mazama, and most of the area of the geologic map. The geology of the area was first described in detail by Diller and Patton (1902) and later by Williams (1942), whose vivid account led to international recognition of Crater Lake as the classic collapse caldera. Because of excellent preservation and access, Mount Mazama, Crater Lake caldera, and the deposits formed by the climactic eruption constitute a natural laboratory for study of volcanic and magmatic processes. For example, the climactic ejecta are renowned among volcanologists as evidence for systematic compositional zonation within a subterranean magma chamber. Mount Mazama’s climactic eruption also is important as the source of the widespread Mazama ash, a useful Holocene stratigraphic marker throughout the Pacific Northwest, adjacent Canada, and offshore. A detailed bathymetric survey of the floor of Crater Lake in 2000 (Bacon and others, 2002) provides a unique record of postcaldera eruptions, the interplay between volcanism and filling of the lake, and sediment transport within this closed basin. Knowledge of the geology and eruptive history of the Mount Mazama edifice, greatly enhanced by the caldera wall exposures, gives exceptional insight into how large volcanoes of magmatic arcs grow and evolve. Lastly, the many smaller volcanoes of the High Cascades beyond the limits of Mount Mazama are a source of information on the flux of mantle-derived magma through the region. General principles of magmatic and eruptive processes revealed by the present study have been incorporated not only in scientific investigations elsewhere, but in the practical evaluation of hazards (Bacon and others, 1997b) and geothermal resources (Bacon and Nathenson, 1996) in the Crater Lake region. In addition to papers in scientific journals, field trip guides, and the hazard and geothermal reports, the major product of this long-term study of Mount Mazama is the geologic map. The map is unusual because it portrays bedrock (outcrop), surficial, and lake floor geology. Caldera wall geology is depicted in detail on the accompanying geologic panoramas.
Files for Users
PDFs
(Geologic Map of Mount Mazama and Crater Lake Caldera, Oregon by Charles R. Bacon)
Download the 49-page pamphlet for this map (sim2832_pamphlet.pdf; 6.7 MB)
Download Sheet 1 (geologic map) as a ~58″ x 45″ PDF file (sim2832_sheet1.pdf; 19.1 MB)
Download Sheet 2 (correlation and list of map units) as a ~41″ x 26″ PDF file (sim2832_sheet2.pdf; 181 kB)
Download Sheet 3 (bedrock geologic map and volcanic history) as a ~45″ x 38″ PDF file (sim2832_sheet3.pdf; 93.7 MB)
Download Sheet 4 (caldera wall panoramas) as a ~50″ x 36″ PDF file (sim2832_sheet4.pdf; 90 MB)
Database
(Database for the Geologic Map of Mount Mazama and Crater Lake Caldera, Oregon by David W. Ramsey, Dillon R. Dutton, and Charles R. Bacon)
This digital database was compiled with ArcInfo version 7.2.1 and consists of files containing geologic map and topographic base data in ArcInfo coverage and grid format. ArcInfo-compatible GIS software is therefore required to use the files of this database. The database is stored in a single zipped folder (crater-lake.zip) in this release for ease of transfer. The scale of the source map limits the spatial resolution (scale) of the database to 1:24,000 or smaller.
Available ArcInfo coverages and grids are described below:
ArcInfo coverage or grid |
Description |
geo (by quad) | Contacts and rock units (lines, polygons) |
vent (by quad) | Volcanic vents (points) |
dash (by quad) | Extensive geologic features (lines) |
dates (by quad) | Dated sample locations (points) |
topo-base | Topographic base (lines) |
cult-base | Cultural base (lines) |
new-bathy | Bathymetric contours (lines) |
Download crater-lake.zip containing the digital database (12.4 MB compressed; 20.7 MB when expanded).
Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) metadata are available for the digital geologic map in text format. FGDC metadata are also available for the topographic base data in text format.
Photographs
Along with the database for the geologic map, the authors prepared a collection of additional photographs
View the photograph collection (22 MB total).
Also of Interest
Below are some links to Crater Lake-related websites.
Volcano and Earthquake Hazards in the Crater Lake Region, Oregon – USGS Open-File Report 97-487
2000 Multibeam Sonar Survey of Crater Lake, Oregon: Data, GIS, Images, and Movies – USGS Digital Data Series DDS-72
Mount Mazama and Crater Lake: Growth and Destruction of a Cascade Volcano – USGS Fact Sheet 092-02
Crater Lake Revealed – USGS Geologic Investigations Map I-2790
Crater Lake: Blue Through Time – USGS Fact Sheet FS-018-03
Crater Lake Volcano Page – U.S. Geological Survey
Crater Lake National Park – National Park Service
Volcano Hazards Program Home Page – U.S. Geological Survey
For questions about the content of this map, contact Charlie Bacon. For questions about the database, contact Dave Ramsey.
Suggested citation and version history
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