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- Cascade_Volcanoes abstract "This article is for the volcanic arc. For the namesake mountain range see Cascade Range.The Cascade Volcanoes (also known as the Cascade Volcanic Arc or the Cascade Arc) are a number of volcanoes in a volcanic arc in western North America, extending from southwestern British Columbia through Washington and Oregon to Northern California, a distance of well over 700 miles (1,100 km). The arc has formed due to subduction along the Cascadia subduction zone. Although taking its name from the Cascade Range, this term is a geologic grouping rather than a geographic one, and the Cascade Volcanoes extend north into the Coast Mountains, past the Fraser River which is the northward limit of the Cascade Range proper.Some of the major cities along the length of the arc include Portland, Seattle, and Vancouver, and the population in the region exceeds 10,000,000 people. All could be potentially affected by volcanic activity and great subduction-zone earthquakes along the arc. Because the population of the Pacific Northwest is rapidly increasing, the Cascade volcanoes are some of the most dangerous, due to their eruptive history and potential for future eruptions, and because they are underlain by weak, hydrothermally altered volcanic rocks that are susceptible to failure. Consequently, Mount Rainier is one of the Decade Volcanoes identified by the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI) as being worthy of particular study, due to the danger it poses to Seattle and Tacoma. Many large, long-runout landslides originating on Cascade volcanoes have inundated valleys tens of kilometers from their sources, and some of the inundated areas now support large populations.The Cascade Volcanoes are part of the Pacific Ring of Fire, the ring of volcanoes and associated mountains around the Pacific Ocean. The Cascade Volcanoes have erupted several times in recorded history. Two most recent were Lassen Peak in 1914 to 1921 and a major eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980. It is also the site of Canada's most recent major eruption about 2,350 years ago at the Mount Meager volcanic complex.".
- Cascade_Volcanoes geologicPeriod "Eocene-to-Holocene".
- Cascade_Volcanoes highestPlace Mount_Rainier.
- Cascade_Volcanoes highestPosition Cascade_Volcanoes__highestPosition__1.
- Cascade_Volcanoes maximumElevation "4392.4728".
- Cascade_Volcanoes region Oregon.
- Cascade_Volcanoes region Washington_(state).
- Cascade_Volcanoes thumbnail Mount_Rainier_7437.JPG?width=300.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageExternalLink www.volcano.si.edu.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageExternalLink framework.html.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageExternalLink CascadeIntro.html.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageID "8845370".
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageLength "36389".
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageOutDegree "370".
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageRevisionID "706594639".
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink 1700_Cascadia_earthquake.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink 1980_eruption_of_Mount_St._Helens.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Accretionary_wedge.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Admiral.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Alberta.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Andesite.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Animal.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Aseismic_creep.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Atmosphere.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Basalt.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Basaltic_andesite.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Batholith.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Before_Present.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Bigfoot.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Bridge_of_the_Gods_(land_bridge).
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink British_Columbia.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Caldera.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink California.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Cambridge_University_Press.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Canadian_Cascade_Arc.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Cascade_Range.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Cascadia_subduction_zone.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cascade_Range.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cascade_Volcanoes.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Eocene_volcanism.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Holocene_volcanism.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Miocene_volcanism.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pacific_Coast_Ranges.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pacific_Ranges.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pleistocene_volcanism.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pliocene_volcanism.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Volcanic_arcs.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Volcanic_belts.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Volcanoes_of_British_Columbia.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Volcanoes_of_California.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Volcanoes_of_Oregon.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Volcanoes_of_Washington_(state).
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Chernaud_Creek.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Chilliwack_batholith.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Cinder_cone.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink City.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Clay.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Cliff.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Coast_Mountains.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Columbia_River.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Complex_volcano.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Continental_margin.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Crater_Lake.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Dacite.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Dam.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Debris.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Debris_flow.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Decade_Volcanoes.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Earthquake.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Effusive_eruption.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink English_language.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Eocene.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Erosion.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Eruption_column.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Eureka,_California.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Explorer_Plate.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Explorer_Ridge.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Explosive_eruption.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Farallon_Plate.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Fault_(geology).
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink First_Nations.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Fissure_vent.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Flood.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Fraser_River.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Fumarole.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Garibaldi_Volcanic_Belt.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Geographic_coordinate_system.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Geography.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Geologist.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Geology.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Geology_of_the_Pacific_Northwest.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink George_Vancouver.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Glacier_Peak.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Gorda_Plate.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Gorda_Ridge.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Holocene.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Hot_spring.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Hotspot_(geology).
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Human.
- Cascade_Volcanoes wikiPageWikiLink Ice.