- Source: Visokoi Island
Visokoi Island is an uninhabited volcanic island and one the three Traversay Islands that constitute a subgroup of the South Sandwich Islands, in the Southern Ocean.
Visokoi consists of one major volcano, Mount Hodson, whose height is usually given as 1,005 metres (3,297 ft). The mountain is mostly covered by glaciers, except for several low areas on the coast like the northern Finger Point and eastern Irving Point. Several parasitic vents are found especially on the eastern side, and one vent close to Finger Point is still hot. Eruptions were reported in 1830, 1927 and 1930.
Geography and geomorphology
Visokoi is one of the South Sandwich Islands, which lie southeast of South Georgia in the Southern Ocean and extend over a distance of 350 kilometres (220 mi) in north-south direction. Leskov Island is 58 kilometres (36 mi) west and Zavodovski Island 45 kilometres (28 mi) north from Visokoi; together they makes up the Traversay Islands subgroup of the South Sandwich Islands. Icebergs occur in the surrounding waters.
The island has an oval shape with a length of 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) and a width of 6 kilometres (3.7 mi); the surface area is about 30.7 square kilometres (11.9 sq mi). The pointy end is east and ends at Irving Point, and the blunt end west with the western Sulphur Point and southwestern Wordie Point. The northernmost point is Finger Point and the southernmost Mikhaylov Point. Cliffs and ice falls make up most of the coastline, except at Irving Point where there are an offshore reef and sandy beaches and Finger Point which is a low-lying lava flow. The island is asymmetric, with the western side having higher cliffs and steeper slopes than the eastern side. Most of the inside of the island is covered with heavily crevassed ice, which reaches the coast in several locations. The total surface area covered by ice in 1962 amounted to 24.1 square kilometres (9.3 sq mi). The 835 metres (2,740 ft) or (more commonly mentioned) 1,005 metres (3,297 ft) high Mount Hodson rises on the western side of the island and has a flat summit. It features a 900 metres (3,000 ft) wide summit crater surrounded by two concentric sector collapse scars. Several scoria cones rise from the eastern part, including Shamrock Hill and an unnamed but probably young cone which form a nunatak. They rise slightly above the ice level and bear no evidence of craters.
Finger Point appears to consist of a lava flow with preserved surface features that extends northwards from the scree-covered slopes of Visokoi, forming a low-lying coastal platform. Several islets lie around Visokoi, such as Coffin Rock off the northeastern coast. The island is surrounded by a 2.3–6 kilometres (1.4–3.7 mi) wide shelf at less than 200 metres (660 ft) depth. The shelf broadens with depth to form a large submarine volcano, which reaches a width of 57 kilometres (35 mi) at 2,500 metres (8,200 ft) depth. The total volume of Visokoi complete with the submarine parts is about 3,000 cubic kilometres (720 cu mi). The submarine edifice has an east-west extension, with numerous small volcanoes, chutes and traces (hummocky terrain) of a sector collapse on the western side and a more extensive shelf cut by submarine canyons on the eastern side. From there, a submarine ridge connects Visokoi with Candlemas Island farther south.
Geology
East of the South Sandwich Islands, the South America Plate subducts beneath the Scotia Plate at a rate of 70 millimetres per year (2.8 in/year). The subduction is responsible for the existence of the South Sandwich island arc, which is constituted by about eleven islands in an eastward curving chain, and submarine volcanoes such as Protector in the north and Adventure and Kemp in the south. From north to south Zavodovski, Leskov Island, Visokoi Island, Candlemas Island-Vindication Island, Saunders Island, Montagu Island, Bristol Island-Freezland Rock, Bellingshausen Island, Cook Island-Thule Island emerge from the sea. Most of the islands are stratovolcanoes of various sizes.
= Composition
=Volcanic rocks are mostly basaltic, but basaltic andesite and andesite are also found. Phenocrysts include clinopyroxene, hypersthene, magnetite, olivine and plagioclase. The rocks are notably iron-rich and define a tholeiitic suite.
Geologic history
The island grew during the past one million years by an alternation of pyroclastic rocks and lava flows with columnar jointing, cut by dykes, building one volcano. Later the eastern cinder cones formed, and the western side of the island was subject to coastal erosion. Potassium-argon dating has yielded an age of 300,000 ± 100,000 years for a rock at Sulphur Point, but activity continued into the Holocene and the Finger Point lava flow may be recent. An 18,000 years old tephra layer in the Vostok ice core has been attributed to Visokoi.
The occurrence of historical eruptions is uncertain. Eruptions were recorded in 1830, 1927 and 1930 when passing ships observed smoke columns. There are no tephra layers embedded in ice but scoria lying on ice may represent either recent activity or older eruptions whose products were covered by ice and then re-exposed.
= Fumarole
=An active fumarole associated with the scoria cone at Finger Point was observed in 1930. In 1962 this fumarole was gone, but volcanically heated ground was reported from the same site in 1964. Thermal anomalies are not visible from satellite images. The fumarole was surrounded by a concentric area of algae, lichens and mosses.
Flora and fauna
Away from the fumarole, vegetation is largely absent from Visokoi and consists mostly of lichens growing on bare rocks. Non-vertebrates include mites and springtails while amphipods, brittle stars, bryozoans, sponges and hydrozoans have been recovered from the shallow water surrounding Visokoi.
Antarctic fulmars, cape petrels, chinstrap penguins, gentoo penguins, kelp gulls, macaroni penguins and skuas nest in the cliffs which are ice-free, and on the low coastal platforms especially at Finger Point. More than 100,000 chinstrap penguin breeding pairs occur on Visokoi. Additional seabirds and seals visit the island without clear evidence of reproduction. Almost a thousand Antarctic fur seals were seen at Irving Point in 1964, making it the largest occurrence in the South Sandwich Islands.
Human history
Visokoi was discovered on the 23 December 1819 by the Thaddeus von Bellingshausen expedition. The proper spelling of the island name is Vysokij. The island can be accessed from Wordie Point and Finger Point, where there are low-lying platforms.
References
= Sources
=External links
Hogg, Oliver T.; Downie, Anna-Leena; Vieira, Rui P.; Darby, Chris (2021). "Macrobenthic Assessment of the South Sandwich Islands Reveals a Biogeographically Distinct Polar Archipelago". Frontiers in Marine Science. 8. doi:10.3389/fmars.2021.650241. ISSN 2296-7745.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Meridian barat ke-27
- Daftar pulau antarktik dan sub-antarktik
- Visokoi Island
- Traversay Islands
- Zavodovski Island
- South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
- List of Antarctic and subantarctic islands
- Candlemas Islands
- South Sandwich Islands
- Montagu Island
- Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen
- Saunders Island, South Sandwich Islands