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U.S. Geological Survey
Geologic Investigations Series I-2790

Crater Lake Revealed

By David W. Ramsey, Peter Dartnell, Charles R. Bacon, Joel E. Robinson, and James V. Gardner

Panoramic photograph taken from visitor overlook on The Watchman by Peter Dartnell.  View is to the east.  Digital photographic processing by Eleanore Ramsey.

Digital perspective view of generalized geologic map of the lake floor draped over shaded-relief image of 2-m bathymetry. Illuminated from 225 degree azimuth and 45 degree elevation. Created with ArcInfo and USGS perspective view calculation program.

Upper image: Panoramic photograph taken from visitor overlook on The Watchman by Peter Dartnell. View is to the east. Digital photographic processing by Eleanore Ramsey.

Lower image: Digital perspective view of generalized geologic map of the lake floor draped over shaded-relief image of 2-m bathymetry. Illuminated from 225 degree azimuth and 45 degree elevation. Created with ArcInfo and USGS perspective view calculation program. Scale varies with distance.

INTRODUCTION

Around 500,000 people each year visit Crater Lake National Park in the Cascade Range of southern Oregon. Volcanic peaks, evergreen forests, and Crater Lake’s incredibly blue water are the park’s main attractions. Crater Lake partially fills the caldera that formed approximately 7,700 years ago by the eruption and subsequent collapse of a 12,000-foot volcano called Mount Mazama. The caldera-forming or climactic eruption of Mount Mazama drastically changed the landscape all around the volcano and spread a blanket of volcanic ash at least as far away as southern Canada.

Prior to the climactic event, Mount Mazama had a 400,000 year history of cone building activity like that of other Cascade volcanoes such as Mount Shasta. Since the climactic eruption, there have been several less violent, smaller postcaldera eruptions within the caldera itself. However, relatively little was known about the specifics of these eruptions because their products were obscured beneath Crater Lake’s surface. As the Crater Lake region is still potentially volcanically active, understanding past eruptive events is important to understanding future eruptions, which could threaten facilities and people at Crater Lake National Park and the major transportation corridor east of the Cascades.

Recently, the lake bottom was mapped with a high-resolution multibeam echo sounder. The new bathymetric survey provides a 2m/pixel view of the lake floor from its deepest basins virtually to the shoreline. Using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) applications, the bathymetry data can be visualized and analyzed to shed light on the geology, geomorphology, and geologic history of Crater Lake.

Download this map as a PDF file (6.7 MB)

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Other links of interest:

Bathymetry and selected perspective views of Crater Lake, OR (USGS Water Resources Investigations Report 01-4046)

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 92-02)

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For questions about the content of this report, contact Dave Ramsey

This map is also available from:

USGS Information Services, Box 25286,
Federal Center, Denver, CO 80225
telephone: 1-888-ASK-USGS; e-mail: infoservices@usgs.gov


URL of this page: http://geopubs.wr.usgs.gov/i-map/i2790/
Maintained by: Carolyn Donlin
Created: 6-25-03
Last modified: 6-25-03 (cad)

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