Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 32-33, 2001/2002
Witness to a Catastrophe
By Tom McDonough
The eruptive collapse of Mount Mazama
represents the biggest volcanic event to occur in North America over the
last 10,000 years. Massive deposits of scoria and pumice blasted the
volcano's slopes and still continue to fill the stream drainages in the
surrounding region. Remains of an ancient forest can still be seen
beneath this material in many of the road cuts around the park. It is
evidence of destruction involving 12 cubic miles of ash and pumice. A
caldera resulted from this destruction about 7,700 years ago, replacing
an edifice that may have reached 12,000 feet high. Few places were left
unaffected by this catastrophe, but one peak fared better than most.
Following Mazama's climactic eruption,
the summit of Mount Scott became the highest point in the immediate
vicinity with an elevation of 8,929 feet above sea level. Mount Scott
was named in honor of Levi Scott, a man who explored southern Oregon in
the middle of the 19th century. Its name in the Klamath language is
Tum-sum-ne or
Tomsandi. The geological origin of this peak has been re-examined in
recent years, with improved dating techniques allowing Dr. Charles Bacon
of the U.S. Geological Survey to better fit this peak into the broader
story of Mount Mazama.
Dr. Howel Williams, who wrote The
Geology of Crater Lake National Park some 60 years ago, believed
that Mount Scott developed late in the history of the great volcano. He
described Mount Scott as a "parasitic" cone that owed its existence to
the larger Mazama. Modern radio-metric dating methods have allowed Dr.
Bacon to amend Williams' assessment. Not only is Mount Scott now
believed to be a part of a complex of cones that combined to form Mount
Mazama, it is possibly the oldest member of this complex.

The view from Mount Scott. NPS photo.
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The silica-rich lavas of Mount Scott
have been dated to 420,000 years, roughly 20,000 years older than any
other rocks found immediately around or within the rim of Crater Lake.
The great age of these flows has helped to explain why the cone is so
eroded in its appearance. Seen from the east, Mount Scott has a conical
shape. When seen from other directions, however, a broad amphitheater
quickly becomes apparent. With its central core missing, it is easy to
wonder about the cause of such great alteration in what was originally a
great cone.
Mount Scott, like all other surrounding
features, was blasted by avalanches of hot pumice and scoria during the
climactic eruption of Mount Mazama. The real dint to its shape, however,
took place centuries prior to the big blast. During at least three, and
possibly four extended periods, glaciers advanced over this and other
peaks in the Cascade Range. Ice slid down and created the west slope
that geologists call a cirque. The abrasive effect of these mile-thick
rivers of ice should not be trivialized. The broad slopes surrounding
Mount Thielson, located north of Mount Scott are missing altogether
because of what the glaciers carved. The same can be said for Union
Peak, a promontory situated some 10 miles to the southwest of Mount
Scott.

Whitebark pines. NPS photo by Jack Boucher,
1960. |
The pumice and scoria now covering
flanks of Mount Scott eventually became a suitable habitat for subalpine
trees. Whitebark pines (Pinus albicaulis) are especially adapted
to the higher elevations . Their flexible limbs bend easily under the
weight of the heavy winter snow pack. Clusters of needles, five in a
bunch, are assembled at the ends of branches and give each the
appearance of a bottlebrush. As you ascend the Mount Scott Trail, take
notice of how these trees become visibly shorter with elevation. A
reduced growing season has both depressed the numbers of these trees and
their size. The prevailing wind has also shaped their appearance,
especially within the cirque. Trunks and limbs all bend back and away
from the strong winds that come across Crater Lake from the west.
A splendid view from the top rewards
everyone who climbs to the top of Mount Scott. Looking east, across the
Klamath Marsh, observers often see expanding cumulus clouds on warmer
summer days. The Three Sisters, located a hundred miles north, display
icy tops just barely visible to the left of Mount Thielson on clear
days. The best view by far, and one that draws considerable attention,
is the view of Crater Lake. Nowhere else in the park do observers see
the entire display of island, rim, and water as well as from Mount
Scott. Perhaps the combination of being up high enough, and a bit
removed from the rim of Crater Lake, allows for a new perspective on the
decapitated mountain.
As previously indicated, Mount Mazama
was not a single cone. Just as the Three Sisters and Broken Top are
considered a volcanic complex, so too was the Mazama volcano. The
difference here, however, was that most of the units that combined to
form Mount Mazama were so close together that their lava overlapped. The
exception, of course, was Mount Scott. All members of the Mazama complex
derived their fluids from the same magma source beneath the surface.
Mount Scott formed first and others followed to the west of it.

Mount Scott from Rim Drive, where the glacial
cirque is plainly evident. NPS phto by Bruce Black, 1959.
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Fortunately for those who appreciate
Mount Scott in the present, it was located too far east to collapse into
the same magma chamber as Mazama had 7,700 years ago. During the
climactic eruption, however, an observer on Mount Scott would have been
in great danger. Avalanches of hot pumice and scoria raced down the
slopes of Mount Mazama and boiled over the top of Mount Scott. Fallout
from a four-mile high plume of pumice also landed on the top of this
cone.
It is difficult, when standing on top
of Mount Scott, to comprehend the catastrophe that occurred here almost
eight millennia ago. The peaceful setting of this place adds to a
deceptive illusion of permanence. It is worth remembering that
geologists have determined that the source of Mazama's climactic
eruption is still intact, and fully capable of building new volcanic
edifices here in the future.
Tom McDonough first came to work at Crater Lake as a seasonal
naturalist in 1969 and has taught science at Chemeketa Community College
in Salem, Oregon, since 1975.