Ruby Mountain, NW British Columbia, Canada

Location: 59.70 N, 133.40 W
Elevation: 5880 feet (1895 m)
Last Updated: November 2000


                                                                                   Photograph by B. Edwards

Ruby Mountain, viewed from the east in the photograph above, is located 25 km east of the town of Atlin, in northwestern British Columbia, and 900 km east of Anchorage, Alaska. Ruby Mountain volcano is a small stratovolcano comprising a series of lava flows, airfall deposits, and volcanic breccia.  It probably formed in the last 1 million years, with the most recent volcanic activity predating the last glaciation in the area (Edwards et. al., 1996).  The volcano is part of the northern Cordilleran volcanic province (Edwards & Russell 2000), which includes the nearby volcanoes at  Cracker Creek and Volcanic Creek.
 


                                                                                    Photograph by B. Edwards

The summit of Ruby Mountain is a partially preserved crater made up of volcanic bombs and scoria.  The northern slopes of the volcano show evidence for hosting glaciers in the past.  Even today, a small rock glacier resides on the northwest face of the mountain.  A recent collapse of the east side of Ruby Mountain resulted in a large landslide, dissecting this portion of the volcano.  The resulting scarp displays a cross-section of the interior structure of the volcano. Blocks of volcanic material (scoria) embedded in grey landslide material are shown above.
 
 

-Ben Edwards, Andy McCarthy, and Anna Bye, Grand Valley State University, MI



Sources of Information:

Aitken, J.D. 1959. Atlin, British Columbia. Geological Survey of Canada Memoir 307, 89 p.

Bye, A.., Edwards, B., 2000. Preliminary field mapping and petrographic analysis of Ruby Mountain
volcano, northwestern British Columbia, Canada.  Fifth annual Michigan Space Grant Consortium meeting.
Abstract, p. 17.

Edwards, B.R. & Russell, J.K. 2000. The distribution, nature and origin of Neogene-Quaternary magmatism
in the Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province, northern Canadian Cordillera.
Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 112, no. 8, 1280-1295.

Edwards, B.R., Hamilton, T.S., Nicholls, J., Stout, M.Z., Russell, J.K., & Simpson, K. 1996.
Late Tertiary to Quaternary volcanism in the Atlin area , northwestern British Columbia; in
Current Research, Part A; GSC Paper 96-1A, 29-36.

Levson, V.M. 1992. Quaternary geology of the Atlin area (104N/11W, 12E). In Geological Fieldwork
1992: British Columbia Ministry of Energy, Mines, and Petroleum Resources Paper 1992-1, p. 375-390.


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