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hulubelu Latitude and Longitude:

5°21′S 104°36′E / 5.350°S 104.600°E / -5.350; 104.600
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hulubelu
Hulubelu is located in Indonesia
Hulubelu
Hulubelu
Location on the Indonesian island of Sumatra
Highest point
Elevation1,040 m (3,410 ft) [1]
Listing List of volcanoes in Indonesia
Coordinates 5°21′S 104°36′E / 5.350°S 104.600°E / -5.350; 104.600 [1]
Geography
Location Sumatra, Indonesia
Geology
Mountain type Caldera
Last eruptionUnknown [1]

Hulubelu is an elliptical, 4-km-long caldera the floor of which is about 700 m above sea level and is surrounded by steep walls in South-Eastern Sumatra. Post-caldera volcanism formed central cones and basaltic and andesitic flank volcanoes. Solfataric areas, mud volcanoes, and hot springs occur at several locations but it is not known for sure when the volcano last erupted, possibly in the Holocene epoch [1]. Thermal areas are aligned North East of and parallel to the Great Sumatran fault, which runs the entire length of the island of Sumatra.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Hulubelu". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2006-12-26.



hulubelu Latitude and Longitude:

5°21′S 104°36′E / 5.350°S 104.600°E / -5.350; 104.600
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hulubelu
Hulubelu is located in Indonesia
Hulubelu
Hulubelu
Location on the Indonesian island of Sumatra
Highest point
Elevation1,040 m (3,410 ft) [1]
Listing List of volcanoes in Indonesia
Coordinates 5°21′S 104°36′E / 5.350°S 104.600°E / -5.350; 104.600 [1]
Geography
Location Sumatra, Indonesia
Geology
Mountain type Caldera
Last eruptionUnknown [1]

Hulubelu is an elliptical, 4-km-long caldera the floor of which is about 700 m above sea level and is surrounded by steep walls in South-Eastern Sumatra. Post-caldera volcanism formed central cones and basaltic and andesitic flank volcanoes. Solfataric areas, mud volcanoes, and hot springs occur at several locations but it is not known for sure when the volcano last erupted, possibly in the Holocene epoch [1]. Thermal areas are aligned North East of and parallel to the Great Sumatran fault, which runs the entire length of the island of Sumatra.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Hulubelu". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2006-12-26.



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