Coordinates: 43°39′N 142°51′E / 43.650°N 142.850°E / 43.650; 142.850

Daisetsuzan Volcanic Group

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Daisetsuzan Volcanic Group
Nutapukaushipe or Nutaku Kamushupe
File:Daisetsu0001.jpg
A view from Biei town
Highest point
PeakMount Asahi
Elevation2,290 m (7,510 ft)
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Naming
Etymologybig snowy mountains
Native name
Geography
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CountryJapan
StateHokkaidō
RegionKamikawa Subprefecture
Parent rangeIshikari Mountains
Biomealpine climate
Geology
Orogenyisland arc
Rock ageQuaternary
Rock typevolcanic
Last eruptionAD 1739 or later[1]
File:Taisetsu Volcano Group Relief Map (B), SRTM-1.jpg
Taisetsu Volcano Group

The Daisetsuzan Volcanic Group (大雪山系, Daisetsu-sankei; also called Taisetsu-zan) is a volcanic group of peaks arranged around the 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) wide Ohachi-Daira (御鉢平, Ohachi-daira) caldera in Hokkaidō, Japan. In the Ainu language it is known as Nutapukaushipe (which means "the mountain above the river"),[2] Nutaku Kamushupe, or Optateske.[3] These peaks are the highest in Hokkaidō. The group lends its name to the Daisetsuzan National Park in which the volcanic group is located.

Geography

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The volcanic group lies at the north end of the Daisetsu-Tokachi graben[3] on the Kurile arc of the Ring of Fire. The volcanic zone makes itself known through a number of fumaroles and natural hot springs.

List of mountains by height

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The following peaks make up the volcanic group:

Name Height Type
Mount Asahi (旭岳, Asahi-dake) 2,290 metres (7,510 ft) stratovolcano
Mount Hokuchin (北鎮岳, Hokuchin-dake) 2,244 metres (7,362 ft) lava dome
Mount Hakuun (白雲岳, Hakuun-dake) 2,230.0 metres (7,316.3 ft) lava dome
Mount Kuma (熊ヶ岳, Kuma-ga-dake) 2,210 metres (7,250 ft) stratovolcano
Mount Pippu (比布岳, Pippu-dake) 2,197 metres (7,208 ft) volcanic
Mount Mamiya (間宮岳, Mamiya-dake) 2,185 metres (7,169 ft) caldera rim
Mount Koizumi (小泉岳, Koizumi-dake) 2,158 metres (7,080 ft) stratovolcano
Mount Hokkai (北海岳, Hokkai-dake) 2,149 metres (7,051 ft) caldera rim
Mount Nokogiri (鋸岳, Nokogiri-dake) 2,142 metres (7,028 ft) volcanic
Mount Matsuda (松田岳, Matsuda-dake) 2,136 metres (7,008 ft) caldera rim
Mount Ryōun (凌雲岳, Ryōun-dake) 2,125 metres (6,972 ft) lava dome
Mount Naka (中岳, Naka-dake) 2,113 metres (6,932 ft) caldera rim
Mount Aibetsu (愛別岳, Aibetsu-dake) 2,112.7 metres (6,931 ft) volcanic
Mount Aka (赤岳, Aka-dake) 2,078.5 metres (6,819 ft) stratovolcano
Mount Eboshi (烏帽子岳, Eboshi-dake) 2,072 metres (6,798 ft) stratovolcano
Mount Goshiki (五色岳, Goshiki-dake) 2,038 metres (6,686 ft) -
Mount Midori (緑岳, Midori-dake) 2,019.9 metres (6,627 ft) -
Mount Kuro (黒岳, Kuro-dake) 1,984.3 metres (6,510 ft) lava dome
Mount Nagayama (永山岳, Nagayama-dake) 1,978 metres (6,490 ft) stratovolcano
Mount Keigetsu (桂月岳, Keigetsu-dake) 1,938 metres (6,358 ft) lava dome

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Taisetsu Volcano Group - Geological Survey of Japan
  2. ^ Geographical Survey Institute website Archived 26 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine (in Japanese), last access 1 July 2008.
  3. ^ a b Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
  • Hokkaipedia, Daisetsuzan Mountains, last access 2 July 2008.
  • Teikoku's Complete Atlas of Japan, Teikoku Shoin Co., Ltd, Tokyo 1990, Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
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