Cinnamon Butte

E676868

Cinnamon Butte is a small, heavily eroded volcanic feature in the Cascade Range of southern Oregon, known primarily as an ancient cinder cone and lava dome complex.

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Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Pleistocene volcano
cinder cone
lava dome complex
volcanic feature
accessibleFrom forest roads in southern Oregon Cascades
composition andesite
basaltic andesite
country United States of America
surface form: United States
coveredBy forest vegetation
currentStatus extinct volcano
drainageBasin Umpqua River basin NERFINISHED
erodedBy fluvial processes
glacial processes
eruptionProduct cinder
lava flows
eruptionStyle effusive
formedBy eruption of mafic to intermediate magma
geologicalAge Pleistocene NERFINISHED
hasFeature eroded crater rim
lava dome remnants
scoria deposits
isPartOf Cascade Range volcanic province NERFINISHED
lastEruption Pleistocene epoch NERFINISHED
locatedIn Cascade Range NERFINISHED
Oregon
United States of America
surface form: United States

southern Oregon NERFINISHED
morphology heavily eroded
small volcanic edifice
mountainRange Cascade Range
namedAfter cinnamon-colored volcanic deposits
near Crater Lake National Park NERFINISHED
Diamond Lake NERFINISHED
Mount Bailey NERFINISHED
overlies older volcanic rocks of the Cascade Range
partOf High Cascades NERFINISHED
region southern Oregon
rockType volcanic rock
significance example of small, eroded Pleistocene cone-dome complex in the Cascades
state Oregon
studiedIn Cascade Range volcanic geology research
tectonicSetting subduction-related arc
topographicExpression low-relief volcanic cone
volcanicArcOrBelt Cascade Volcanic Arc NERFINISHED
volcanoType cinder cone
lava dome complex

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Volcanoes of Oregon hasNotableMember Cinnamon Butte