Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 11, No. 2, August, 1938
The Pumice Castle
By Wayne E. Kartchner, Ranger Naturalist and John E. Doerr, Jr.,
Park Naturalist
Of the many colorful volcanic
formations in the walls surrounding Crater Lake, The Pumice Castle, on
the east wall, attracts the attention of all visitors making the launch
trip around the lake, and of many visitors viewing the crater walls from
the rim, particularly when the afternoon sunlight emphasizes the pattern
of color on the east wall.
The Pumice Castle is part of an
extensive lenticular bed of fragmental pumice outcropping on the crater
wall about 1,300 feet above the level of the lake, or 400 feet below the
crater rim just south of Cloudcap. The bed of pumice has a maximum
thickness of 190 feet. Below it much of the section of the crater wall
is hidden by talus, except for a few thin layers of lava and beds of
fragmental material. Immediately above the lenticular bed of pumice is a
thick, massive bed of andesite. Above the andesite occurs the pumice
which mantles the remnants of Ancient Mount Mazama and the region
extending for many miles beyond.
Following is a measured section from
the top to the bottom of The Pumice Castle.
4 feet of brownish red fragmental
pumice
2 feet of light buff to pink fragmental pumice
4 feet of brownish red fragmental pumice
60 feet of gray fragmental pumice
60 feet of reddish brown fragmental pumice
6 feet of black obsidian
30 feet of brownish red fragmental pumice
4 feet of brown andesite containing numerous small lenses of black
obsidian
20 feet of reddish brown fragmental pumice
A study of the section, composed of
layers of hard, resistant material such as the andesite and obsidian
interspersed in the soft, less resistant layers of fragmental pumice,
explains why erosion has produced the castle-like feature.
In addition to the scenic value of The
Pumice Castle, it is a significant scientific feature in that it is
evidence of a pumice eruption which occurred earlier than the ejection
of material represented by the great thickness of pumice exposed at the
top of the crater wall, and which mantles the region of miles beyond the
crater rim.
Beds of fragmental pumice, similar to
that exposed at The Pumice Castle, are exposed at several places in the
north wall. At the Llao Rock flow and at Palisade Point the pumice
occurs beneath thick lava flows. Whether these lenticular outcrops of
pumice are of the same age, or represent material ejected during one
eruption, has as yet not been determined. Field studies to date suggest
that they represent material ejected during one eruption. From further
field studies it may be possible to determine not only whether the
pumice was ejected during one eruption but also to determine the
approximate location of the vent or vents from which the material was
ejected.
The Pumice Castle, the product of
volcanic activity and erosion, exemplifies the combination of scenic and
scientific values typical of Crater Lake, scenic in that its coloring
and architecture stimulate the imagination, scientific in that it tells
part of the story of the building and destruction of Mount Mazama.
