Gorely

Gorely
Volcano Gorely with a turquoise lake, Kamchatka
Photo: Tany Solovey
Highest point
Elevation1,799 m (5,902 ft)
Coordinates52°33′29″N 158°01′48″E / 52.558°N 158.03°E / 52.558; 158.03
Geography
Gorely
Location in Kamchatka Krai, Russia
LocationKamchatka, Russia
Parent rangeEastern Range
Geology
Mountain typeStratovolcanoes
Last eruptionJune 2010

Gorely (Russian: Горелый, literally Burnt) is a volcano located in the southern part of the Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia. It consists of five overlapping stratovolcanoes and is one of the most active in southern Kamchatka.
Gorely is a large, long-lived shield-type volcano that is currently in an eruptive phase. Prior eruptions occurred in 1980-81 and 1984–86.
Several complexes compose the overall volcanic structure:

  • ancient Pra-Gorely volcano which measures 20–25 km in diameter;
  • a 12 km diameter caldera;
  • thick stratum of ignimbrites totaling a volume of 100 km3;
  • post-caldera eruption cinder cones;
  • modern edifice – “Young Gorely” composed of three large superimposed cones and 11 associated craters forming a NW-SE trending intra-caldera ridgeline;
  • a complex of 40 modern subsidiary cones on the slopes of “Young Gorely”.

In 2010, activity began to increase, suggesting the volcano was waking up. A new vent was discovered on the inner southeast wall of the crater.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ "VolcanoDiscovery: volcano adventure tours & travel - Zig-zag patterns in fractures of the crust of a lava lake (Photo: kaylash)". www.volcanodiscovery.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-29. Retrieved 2025-10-06.