Contact | RSS | EN | DE | EL | ES | FR | IT | RU

Tafu-Maka Volcano

Updated: Mar 28, 2024 10:45 GMT -
Submarine volcano -1400 m / - 4,593 ft
Tonga, Tonga Islands, -15.37°S / -174.23°W
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)

[smaller] [larger]
Typical eruption style: unspecified
Tafu-Maka volcano eruptions: 2008 

Latest nearby earthquakes

No recent earthquakes
TimeMag. / DepthDistance / Location

Background

Two submarine volcanoes, Tafu and Maka, lie along a NE-SW-trending ridge segment on the southern part of the NE Lau Spreading Center (NELSC). The NELSC is a back-arc spreading center in the northeast part of the Lau Basin. Tafu (Tongan for "source of fire") rises to about 1400 m below sea level at the NE end of the ridge segment, and Maka (Tongan for "rock") reaches 1560 m below sea level at the SW end of the ridge segment. A November 2008 NOAA Vents Program expedition discovered submarine hydrothermal plumes consistent with very recent (days to weeks?) submarine lava effusion from Maka volcano. A return visit in May 2009 documented the freshly emplaced lava flow at Maka.
---
Smithsonian / GVP volcano information

Latest satellite images

tafumaka satellite image sat1tafumaka satellite image sat2

No news in this list.

On this page: