Black Butte (Oregon)

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Black Butte
Elevation 6,355 feet (1,937 metres)
Location Oregon, USA
Range Cascade Volcanic Arc, Cascades
Prominence 3,076 ft (938 m)
Coordinates 44.3995608° N 121.6344956° W
Topo map USGS Black Butte 44121-D6

Black Butte is a cinder cone located in Central Oregon in the United States, northwest of the town of Sisters, Oregon. An extinct volcano, it is composed of basaltic andesite with its summit at an elevation of 6,436 ft (1,962 m) , the cone rises about 3,100 ft (945 m) over the surrounding plateau. Black Butte is a striking feature just north of US Highway 20, which descends from the east flank of the Cascades. It is nearly symmetrical, with no marks of glaciation. Even though it is older than the High Cascades mountains visible to the west, which are heavily scoured by ice-age glacier activity, Black Butte receives less snow at its lower elevation and location somewhat east of the main trend of the High Cascades.

In the local indigenous tongue, the mountain is called Turututu, but records show settlers calling it Black Butte as early as 1855. A road climbs halfway up Black Butte and hiking trails continue to the summit. On the north side at the base of the mountain, the Metolius River bursts forth from a spring.

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Volcanoes of Oregon
v  d  e
High Cascades Mt Hood | Olallie Butte | Mt Jefferson | Three Fingered Jack | Hogg Rock | Hoodoo Butte | Hayrick Butte | Black Butte | Mt Washington | Belknap Crater | Black Crater | Three Sisters | Broken Top | Tumalo Mtn | Mt Bachelor | Maiden Peak | Diamond Peak | Howlock Mtn | Mt Thielsen | Mt Bailey | Mt Mazama / Crater Lake | Mt Scott | Union Peak | Pelican Butte | Mt McLoughlin | Aspen Butte
 Western Cascades  Boring Lava Field (Mt Sylvania | Mt Tabor | Rocky Butte | Powell Butte | Larch Mtn)
Eastern Cascades Pilot Butte | Lava Butte | Newberry Volcano | Yamsay Mtn
Basin and Range Big Hole | Hole-in-the-Ground | Fort Rock | Diamond Craters  Columbia Plateau  Columbia River Basalt Group