Gaua (previously called Santa Maria) Island is one of the Banks and Torres
group in the northern part of the Vanuatu archipeligo.
Gaua rises
about 9,800 feet (3,000 m) from the sea floor. Steaming Hill Lake, a
crescent-shaped crater lake, is just below Mt. Garat, a secondary
cone and summit of the stratovolcano (a volcano
made of both lava flows and pyroclastic <ejected> material)
volcano. Solfataras (a type of fumerole, with particularly sulphurous
gasses) are on the south side of the volcano and hot springs are on
the north slope. Gaua has had at least 13 eruptions from Mt. Garat
since 1963.
The most
recent eruption was in 1982 and lasted less than one day.
Most of the historic eruptions have lasted only 1-2 days with the
1963 and 1973-1974 eruptions lasting a few months. Each of
these eruptions was small with VEI of about 2 except for the
1965 eruption which had VEI=3.
However, from time to time the gases emitted have been poisonous and
approaching it is dangerous.
Soritmeat - (Mt. Sere'ama)
At least six
volcanic peaks define the spine of Vanua Lava Island. Soretimeat,
near the center of the island, is a complex volcano like Vesuvius.
Soretimeat has a summit crater about 2,700 feet (900 m) in diameter
and 300 feet (100 m) deep which contains a lake. A solfataric (a type
of fumerole, with particularly sulphurous gasses) area, called
Frenchman's Sulphur Deposit, is on the outer northeast flank of the
volcano. Steam, hydrogen sulfide, carbon dioxide, and some sulfur
dioxide is released.
Three
historic eruptions occurred ca. 1860, ca. 1865, and from 1965-1966.
Each of these eruptions was small with VEI of about 2. The two
eruptions in the 19th century were from the central vent and were
explosive. The most recent eruption was on the northwest flank and
was phreatic (when water and heated rocks, not magma, combine to
cause an explosive eruption of steam and pulverised rocks).
A sample of
basaltic lava from Soretimeat contains crystals of plagioclase,
pyroxene, and a little olivine. A chemical analysis of the basalt is:
54.3% SiO2, trace TiO2, 15.2% Fe2O3, 16.3% Al2O3, trace MnO, 8.5%
CaO, 1.9% MgO, 3.3% Na2O, and 0.8% K2O.
Traitor's Head
is a stratovolcano
with two historic eruptions. In 1881, the volcano erupted from a
submarine vent on the northeast flank. In 1959, an eruption was
reported from four submarine vents north of Erromango
Island.