<h2><SPAN name="page_060">THE LAST VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES</SPAN></h2>
<p class="indent">
There are more volcanoes in our country than is generally supposed.
Some are very small and some rank among the greatest of mountain
peaks, but all together there are many hundreds, perhaps thousands,
of them. At present they are all silent and apparently dead. We
are accustomed to speak of them as extinct volcanoes, but of this
we must not be too sure.</p>
<p class="indent">
They stand dark and cold, giving no clue to the nature of the forces
which made them, except perhaps by the presence of an occasional hot
spring and the appearance of the rocks of which they are composed.
The slag-like character of these rocks we have learned to associate
with intense heat. Some of these volcanoes are very old and have
been nearly worn away; others are new and almost as perfect as
when they were first made.</p>
<p class="indent">
Where shall we go to find these volcanoes? Are there any upon the
Atlantic coast or neighboring highlands? Though you may travel
over all that portion of our country, you will find none, although
you will discover in places, as for instance in the palisades of
the Hudson, lavas which came from very ancient volcanoes, worn
down so long ago that their very sites are lost to view.</p>
<p class="indent">
If we search the Mississippi basin we find there even fewer traces
of volcanic action than upon the eastern highlands. The greater
portion of the vast area embraced by the Mississippi River and its
tributaries has had a very uneventful history, although at times
earthquakes may have occurred and the sky may have been darkened
by ashes from eruptions in distant parts of the earth.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig025.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="354" alt="Fig. 25">
FIG. 25.—FISSURE IN THE LAVA, SHADOW MOUNTAIN
<p class="imgnote">The groovings in the lava show that it was
squeezed out in a half-solid condition</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
It is in the country west of the Rockies, the region last to be
explored and settled, that the objects of our search come to light.
Here are volcanoes and lava fields so extensive as almost to bury
from sight the older surface of the earth. Some of them appear
as if but yesterday they had been glowing with heat.</p>
<p class="indent">
In the Cordilleran region Nature has carried on her work with a
master hand. She has lifted the earth's crust to form a great plateau.
Portions of the plateau she has broken, projecting the fragments
upward to form lofty mountains, while along the fissures thus created
she has squeezed out fiery molten matter from the interior of the
earth. This molten material has spread out in fields of lava or
has piled itself about small openings, forming volcanic cones,
which in some cases have overtopped the loftiest mountain ranges
of the continent. It is believed that a number of these volcanic
eruptions have occurred in the Cordilleran region of the United
States since the discovery of America, and that one took place
within the lifetime of many persons now living.</p>
<p class="indent">
San Francisco Mountain, in northern Arizona, is the loftiest volcanic
peak of a region dotted with volcanoes and lava flows. This great
volcano, like most of its neighbors, has long been extinct, although
a few miles to the eastward there appears a group of small but
very new cones.</p>
<p class="indent">
A ride of fifteen miles from the town of Flagstaff, across the
forest-covered plateau, brings us to Shadow Mountain and the fields
of lava and volcanic sand lying at its base. The mountain, throughout
its height of over one thousand feet, is a conical aggregate of
loose lapilli which give way under the feet and make climbing the
peak very tiresome.</p>
<p class="indent">
The lapilli and scoriæ are slag-like fragments of lava which
have been blown out of the throat of the volcano while in a hot or
semi-molten condition. These fragments, as they fall back to the
earth, collect about the opening and in time build up the volcano,
or cinder cone, as such a mountain is frequently called. The finer
particles, which have the appearance of dark sand, fall farther
away and form a layer over the surface for some miles upon every
side. These products of an explosive volcano are sometimes called
cinders and ashes, because of their resemblance to the slag and
refuse of furnaces.</p>
<p class="indent">
In the case of the volcano which we are studying, the lapilli are
so black that they give the cone the appearance of being darkened
by the shadow of a cloud, and on this account the peak is named
Shadow Mountain. As the days are usually bright here, the shadow
effect is very striking.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 515px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig026.jpg" width-obs="515" height-obs="411" alt="Fig. 26">
FIG. 26.—EDGE OF LAVA FIELD, WITH PUMICE IN THE FOREGROUND
<p class="imgnote">Near Shadow Mountain</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
There are several smaller craters, east of the main one, which
also threw out volcanic sand and lapilli. The surrounding hills are
of volcanic origin, although very much older than Shadow Mountain.
These hills are covered with pine forests; but trees or plants
have gained only slight hold upon the newer surfaces of the cinder
cones, which present a picture of almost complete desolation.</p>
<p class="indent">
There have been two other eruptions since the making of the cinder
cones, and these were marked by flows of molten lava. Although
the rough and rugged surface of the older flow has not yet begun
to crumble and form soil, as it must do in time, yet a few trees
are found here and there, reaching their roots down for the scanty
nourishment to be drawn from the crevices of the rocks.</p>
<p class="indent">
The last flow of lava, which was very small, ran into a depression
in the other flow just described. This lava appears so fresh that
we almost expect to find the rocks still warm. What a contrast
between the wooded hillside adjoining, with its carpet of soft
volcanic sand, and the jagged surface of the lava! Care must be
taken in climbing over the lava, for the sharp points and angles
are ever ready to tear one's shoes and hands. It cannot be many
years since these hard, cold rocks formed a glowing mass of molten
matter creeping quietly out of some hidden fissure which reached
far down into the earth. The lava hardened as it became cold, just
as does molten iron when led from the furnace to make a casting.</p>
<p class="indent">
At one spot in the lava field stand the remains of rude stone houses
built into caverns in the lava. About them are scattered pieces
of broken pottery. These rude dwellings were probably occupied by
some of the prehistoric people whose homes are also found along
many of the streams, and in the caves of the plateau region. We
can see no reason for their coming to this desolate place, so far
from a water supply, unless it was that the rugged lava offered
some protection from their enemies.</p>
<p class="indent">
Now let us imagine ourselves transported to northern California.
Near Lassen Peak, the southernmost of the great volcanoes of the
Cascade Range, there lies another field of recent volcanic activity
of even greater interest than the first. The centre of attraction is
Cinder Cone, similar to Shadow Mountain in its manner of formation
as well as in materials, but more symmetrical in form. Upon one side
is a field of black lava several miles in extent, while volcanic
sand has been spread over all the adjacent country.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig027.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="374" alt="Fig. 27">
FIG. 27.—THE CRATER OF CINDER CONE</div>
<p class="indent">
As nearly as can be determined, only a little more than two hundred
years ago the valley now occupied by Cinder Cone and the lava fields
gave no indication of ever becoming a new centre of volcanic action.
It has been thousands of years since the ancient volcanic peaks
and cinder cones of this mountainous region became extinct. The
glaciers had come, and torn and ground away the surface of the
lava, and afterward dense forests had hidden all the rocky slopes,
while lakes had occupied many of the valleys. Far below, however,
the fires had not gone out. In many places there were boiling springs
from which the steam, upon cold mornings, rose in dense white clouds.</p>
<p class="indent">
Then, for some reason which we do not understand, the forces beneath
the surface increased their activity. The force of the steam and
other gases was too great to be restrained, and at a weak spot in
the overlying rocks they broke through. Molten lava accompanied
them, and a new volcano came into life in the valley where Cinder
Cone now raises its dark, symmetrical slopes.</p>
<p class="indent">
The eruptions were violent. With explosive force the molten lava
was torn into fragments, and sand, lapilli, and bombs were hurled out
into the air. The finer particles were carried by the air currents
far over the surrounding country. The lapilli, scoriæ, and
bombs fell around the throat of the volcano, finally building up
the cone to its present proportions. The great bombs, some of them
five feet in diameter, are among the most remarkable products of
this eruption. They lie scattered about upon the surface of the
ground at the foot of the cone, and, although they are often irregular
in shape, they might almost be mistaken for huge cannon-balls.
The eruption killed and burned the trees in the near-by forests,
burying them under six or seven feet of fine sand or ashes. After
the cone had been built and the explosive eruptions had nearly
stopped, a stream of molten lava burst from the base of the cone
and filled a portion of the valley.</p>
<p class="indent">
Now followed a long period of quiet. Trees began to grow upon the
sand and gradually to encroach upon the barren wastes about Cinder
Cone. It appeared as if there were to be no more eruptions. But
the volcano was only resting. At about the time, perhaps, when
the gold seekers began to pour across the continent to California,
there was another eruption; but this time it took the form of a
lava flow and was so quiet as to create no disturbance in the
surrounding country.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig028.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="369" alt="Fig. 28">
FIG. 28.—CINDER CONE
<p class="imgnote">The trees were killed by the last eruption of
volcanic ashes</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
A stream of thick, viscous lava flowed slowly out of an opening
at the southern base of Cinder Cone. As the lava crept down the
gentle slopes of the valley, it crusted over, forming a black,
slag-like surface. The surface was from time to time broken up
and mixed with the softer portions beneath, so that the movement
of the flow was still further retarded. At the lower end of the
valley the lava occupied a portion of a body of water now known
as Lake Bidwell; its rugged front made a dam across the valley
above, forming Snag Lake. The stumps of the trees which were killed
by the water when the lake was first formed are still standing.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig029.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="333" alt="Fig. 29">
FIG. 29.—THE LAST LAVA FLOW IN THE UNITED STATES
<p class="imgnote">At Cinder Cone, California. It formed a dam
across a valley, thus creating Snag Lake</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
One's feet sink deep into volcanic sands, and walking is tiresome.
The lava field resulting from the last eruption is free from sand,
but its rough surface, formed of broken blocks, is difficult to
cross.</p>
<p class="indent">
A few charred stumps rise out of the sand, pathetic remnants of the
forest trees that were growing at the time of the first eruption.
Most of the trees have completely disappeared, leaving shallow
pits where they once stood.</p>
<p class="indent">
It is exceedingly difficult to climb the cone, which rises over
six hundred feet, for the slopes, composed of loose lapilli, are
so steep that one slips back at every step nearly as far as he
advances. From the summit a remarkable sight meets the eye. Within
the rim of the main crater is a second crater with a rim nearly as
high as the first, while the cavity within has a depth of about
two hundred and fifty feet.</p>
<p class="indent">
Because of the loose character of the material of which it is built,
no streamlets have yet worn channels down the slopes of Cinder
Cone, and except for the presence of two small bushes which cling
to its side, it is just as bare and perfect in form as when first
completed.</p>
<p class="indent">
Little by little the forests are encroaching upon the sand-covered
slopes about the cone, and in time these slopes, the black fields
of lava, and the cone itself, will be covered with forests like
the older lava fields and cinder cones which appear upon every
hand.</p>
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