V. Geological and
Biological Information on Crater Lake Area
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B. Formation of Lake
During Mazama's last long period
of dormancy, magma had been crystallizing in feeder tubes deep inside the
mountain, thereby preventing the escape of gases. The consequent mounting
pressure began to blast cracks in the roof of the magma chamber five or six
miles underground, a process that would soon allow its fiery contents to escape.
Advance notice of the final
gigantic eruption of the mountain came in the form of violent earthquakes and
explosions, precipitating enormous clouds of gas and steam, hurled up amid smoke
and pumice, that condensed into billowing thunderclouds Columns of dust, ash,
and bits of rock blocked out the sun for weeks, while pumice dust whitened the
landscape for 600 miles around. This action was followed by a lull of several
weeks before the explosions resumed again, emitting yet more tall clouds of
steam. Then pumice again began to boil, and small fragments began shooting
upward through vents already widened by earlier outbursts. As this column of
molten rock rose in the throat of the volcano, it gathered speed until it
finally boiled over the rim in a glowing avalanche of expanding gases and pumice
that, at exceedingly high temperatures and speeds, raced down the slopes and
over the surrounding country for a distance of more than thirty-three miles,
crushing and suffocating every form of life in its path. Blocks of pumice as
large as fourteen feet in diameter have been found as far as Chemult,
twenty-five miles northeast of the lake. Mount Mazama's final eruption lasted
only a comparatively short time:
The probability is that the whole eruptive episode
was short-lived and that explosions, if not actually continuous, followed each
other at short intervals.
[5]
In the early years of study of
this area, the primary events in Crater Lake's violent birth were pieced
together by patient sifting of the available geological evidence: glacial,
scars, pumice deposits, and lava flows. In recent years, carbon-14 dating has
provided more precise information. Radioactive carbon in the charcoal of trees,
charred and buried under lava and pumice, date the eruption at between 6,600 and
7,100 years ago, or around 4,600 B.C. The first theories on Crater Lake's
formation suggested that Mazama s sudden and thunderous explosion had scattered
the top of the mountain hundreds of miles in every direction, leaving a fiery
crater that eventually cooled and filled with water from rain and melting snow.
On December 18, 1901, during a presidential address before the Geological
Society of Washington, Joseph S. Diller, Chief Geologist of the United States
Geological Survey, proposed instead a theory of subsidence. His field reports
were published the next year as a USGS professional paper, and the theory gained
general acceptance.
[6]

Illustration 1. From National
Parks of the West, p. 71.
Diller's main premise was that
great quantities of molten rock drained away through subterranean passages, thus
weakening the peak's support and causing its collapse. For days following
Mazama's final explosion, long fissures continued to open beneath the volcano
due to uninterrupted underground activity. Through these additional minor
eruptions and expulsions and the gradual draining away of magma through
underground chambers, the mountain's energy spent itself, leaving the peak a
heavy shell hanging over an empty pocket. Shaken by the continued violence and
deprived of the molten magma core that had supported it, the top of the
mountain, within probably only a few days, collapsed with a roar that must have
been earth-shattering. When the dust and rubble cleared, the upper mile of the
mountain was gone. All that remained of mighty Mount Mazama was a hollow base.
Thus was the great basin that would become Crater Lake born, as a huge pit or
caldera, more than five miles across and 4,000 feet deep, rimmed by tall
glaciated precipices.
Quiet reigned now for a short
time, interrupted occasionally by lava bursting through the fractured floor of
the basin. Such activity near the north wall resulted in 1,300-foot-high Merriam
Cone, whose tip is almost 500 feet below the surface of the lake. In time the
floor solidified, only to be cracked by another eruption in the southwest corner
that resulted in a smaller cone, now known as Wizard Island, rising 763 feet
above the water level. Gradually these new cinder cones and lava fields
partially refilled the great pit. The first rain- and snowfalls into the basin
were probably turned to steam by the boiling mud and hot rocks on its floor. But
as volcanic activity ceased and the mountain cooled, and as annual precipitation
far exceeded the amount of water lost by evaporation and seepage, input from
rain and melting snow began to accumulate, causing the water level to rise and
ultimately resulting in a broad lake that filled the caldera up to about half
its depth. Because all outlets and inlets had been plugged by lava flows during
the eruption, the water level has remained constant through the years except for
seasonal variations or drops in the levels of annual precipitation. A certain
amount of water disappears through underground seepage.
[7]