The last eruption of Mount Mazama was 7,700 years ago, too long ago for us to know how many died in the explosion.
No. Mount Mazama is associated with a subduction zone, which is formed by converging plates.
In the Cascade Mountain Range in the US
Yes Mount Mazama is part of the ring of fire, as are all the volcanoes of the U.S. Pacific Coast.
Mount Mazama is a volcano in the Cascade Range located in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. It is situated on the Cascadia Subduction Zone, where the Juan de Fuca Plate is being subducted beneath the North American Plate.
Yes. It is near a subduction sone.
Mount Mazama is part of the Cascade Mountain Range
Mt. Mazama is 8,159 ft.
No. Mount Mazama is a stratovolcano with a caldera.
No. Mount Mazama still exists. Between 6,000 and 8,000 years ago Mount Mazama underwent a cataclysmic eruption and much of the mountain collapsed.
Mount Mazama is not in the ocean. It is in the US state of Oregon. It is 117 miles from the Pacific Ocean.
No, it is extinct
The last eruption of Mount Mazama was 7,700 years ago, too long ago for us to know how many died in the explosion.
No. Mount Mazama is associated with a subduction zone, which is formed by converging plates.
In the caldera of Mount Mazama, Oregon.
In the Cascade Mountain Range in the US
Yes Mount Mazama is part of the ring of fire, as are all the volcanoes of the U.S. Pacific Coast.