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Tor Zawar

Coordinates: 30°28′45″N 67°28′30″E / 30.47917°N 67.47500°E / 30.47917; 67.47500
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Tor Zawar
Tor Zawar is located in Balochistan, Pakistan
Tor Zawar
Tor Zawar
Location of Tor Zawar in the Province of Balochistan
Tor Zawar is located in Pakistan
Tor Zawar
Tor Zawar
Location of Tor Zawar in Pakistan
Highest point
Elevation2,237 m (7,339 ft)
Coordinates30°28′45″N 67°28′30″E / 30.47917°N 67.47500°E / 30.47917; 67.47500
Geography
LocationPakistan
Geology
Mountain typeFissure vents
Last eruptionJanuary 2010

Tor Zawar is a disputed fissure vent volcano in western Pakistan and the only recent volcano in Pakistan. Its first, and so far only, eruption occurred in January 2010.

Morphology

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Tor Zawar is a group of closely spaced fissure vents on a non-volcanic mountain in a tectonically active region between the Bibai and Gogai thrust faults (Global Volcanism Program), which is in the Ziarat region near the village of Wham.

2010 eruption

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An eruption in the region on January 29, 2010 surprised volcanologists because no previous volcanic activity had ever taken place there before. A local scientist reported that fissures opened, then emitted gases for a little while before the eruption began. The eruption produced a small spatter cone and a lava flow that only travelled 8.2 metres, and caused some minor damage. The lava is trachybasalt and basaltic andesite.

The eruption was preceded by a 60 km deep earthquake on 27 January. The calculated source depth of the lava is consistent with an origin at this depth in the asthenosphere.[1]

Disputed status

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The origin of the lava is disputed.[2] Kerr et al. (2010) interpreted the rocks as having formed from molten magma that had been created by partial melting in the mantle followed by eruption from a volcanic fissure vent.[1] Kassi et al. (2012) disputed a mantle origin for these rocks, instead suggesting that the magma source was near-surface sedimentary rock that had been melted close to electricity pylons that had been struck by lightning, in a process similar to the formation of fulgurites[3] (that are formed when lightning melts sand to produce natural glass).

Initially, the Smithsonian Institution's Global Volcanism Program included Tor Zawar in its database of volcanoes, citing the paper by Kerr et al. (2010).[4] As of December 2017, however, the Global Volcanism Program excludes Tor Zawar from its volcano database[5] and excludes the 2010 event from its eruption database.[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b Kerr, A. C. and Khan M. McDonald I (2010) Eruption of basaltic magma at Tor Zawar, Pakistan on 27 January 2010: geochemical and petrological constraints on petrogenesis, Mineral Mag, v. 74, pp. 1027-1036
  2. ^ "Tor Zawar Volcano | John Seach". Archived from the original on 2017-10-28.
  3. ^ Kassi. A, M., Kasi, A. K., Tawab Khan, A. and Salam Khan, A. (2012) Comments on the eruption of basaltic magma at Tor Zawar, Balochistan, Pakistan on 27 January 2010, with a discussion of the geochemical and petrological constraints on its petrogenesis, Mineralogical Magazine, volume 76, 717-723
  4. ^ "Global Volcanism Program | Tor Zawar | Summary". volcano.si.edu. Archived from the original on 31 January 2012. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  5. ^ "Global Volcanism Program | Holocene Volcano List".
  6. ^ "Global Volcanism Program | Database Search".