Northern Yatsugatake Volcanic Group (八ヶ岳北部 Yatsugatake-minami-gun) |
|
Volcanic group | |
Mount Shibagare, Mount Yoko, and Mount Tateshina (October 2006)
|
|
Name origin: Northern Mountains with eight peaks | |
Country | Japan |
---|---|
State | Nagano Prefecture |
Region | Chūbu |
Districts | Kitasaku, Minamisaku District, Nagano |
Municipalities | Chino, Koumi, Minamimaki, Saku, Sakuho, Tateshina |
Range | Yatsugatake Mountains |
Borders on | Southern Yatsugatake Volcanic Group |
Highest point | Mount Tengu |
- elevation | 2,646 m (8,681 ft) |
- coordinates | |
Biome | Alpine climate |
Geology | Volcanic |
Orogeny | Island arc |
Period | Quaternary |
Animal | Japanese Serow |
Northern Yatsugatake Volcanic Group (八ヶ岳南部 Yatsugatake Kita-gun ), also just Kita Yatsugatake is a volcanic group of stratovolcanoes and lava domes[1] located in Nagano Prefecture on Honshū in Japan.
Contents |
The Northern Yatsugatake Volcanic Group is part of the Yatsugatake Mountains. The northern group is defined as the mountains from Mount Futago to Natsuzawa Pass. The highest peak of the mountains is Mount Tengu and the elevation is 2,646 metres.
The southern Yatsugatake mountains are steep and have alpine characteristics. The mountains of the Northern Yatsugatake Volcanic Group are gentler and lower.
Yatsugatake is listed among the 100 famous mountains in Japan, but this refers to the Southern Yatsugatake Volcanic Group. Mount Tateshina is also mentioned as one of the 100 famous mountains, and it is part of the Northern Yatsugatake mountains, but is listed separately.
These mountains are part of the Yatsugatake-Chūshin Kōgen Quasi-National Park.[2]
The volcanoes are stratovolcanos that are 1 million to 200,000 years old. The rock is mainly basalt, dacite, and andesite. Mount Yoko has shown the most recent activity and is now considered an active volcano. It last erupted about 800 years ago.[3] In 888 a debris avalanche on the East side of the volcanic massif caused Lake Matsubara to form. The Tateshina-kogen plateau was formed by a large lava flow.[1]
The following peaks, from North to South, make up the Northern Yatsugatake Volcanic Group:[1][3]