Yes. it is int he United States.
Long Valley calderas is a type of volcano that is located in California, United States.
Long Valley caldera is classified as a supervolcano. It is a large volcanic caldera in eastern California that was formed by a massive explosive eruption around 760,000 years ago. It is known for its potential to produce extremely large and destructive eruptions.
No one lives in the caldera itself, Mammoth Lakes is on the rim of the caldera and the 2000 US census put their population at 7,093.
The major city closest to Long Valley Caldera is Mammoth Lakes in California. It is located about 12 miles southeast of the caldera.
Yellowstone caldera Long valley caldera La Garita eruption Toba eruption Taupo eruption Scafells eruption
Long Valley Caldera is a quaternary rhyolitic volcanic. It is located in the boundary of the Sierra Nevada and Range Province in the eastern part of California.
No. California's central valley is a tectonic feature. No caldera is that large.
I believe it is the Tlapacoya Volcano
Long Valley Caldera has erupted several times. The one that actually formed the caldera took place 760,000 years ago, but after that there were more 500,000, 300,000, and 100,000 years ago.
It is a shield volcano, a result of the Great African Rift Valley. It is located on the southern arm of the African Rift Zone.
There is a supervolcano in Arizona: The Silver Creek Caldera near the town of Peach Springs. This volcano erupted between 18 and 19 million years ago. The caldera has since been torn in half by rifting. There are other, nearby supervolcanoes. The Valles Caldera near Santa Fe, New Mexico is the closest. Next would be Long Valley Caldera, in California east of Yosemite. Then there's Yellowstone.
No, it is just a realy hot place in the middle of USA