Scientists aim to map Mount Edgecumbe volcano鈥檚 upper plumbing

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
Oct. 9, 2025

Mount Edgecumbe volcano in Southeast 91视频 sits in a place where a volcano shouldn鈥檛 really be sitting.

Mount Edgecumbe volcano
Photo by Max Kaufman/91视频 Volcano Observatory
Mount Edgecumbe rises in the foreground with Crater Ridge behind and to the north on May 19, 2022.

Research underway with new federal funding aims to solve that mystery, learn how magma forms beneath the reawakened volcano and reveal the structure of its upper plumbing system 鈥 the magma reservoirs, conduits and cracks in which magma is stored and travels to the surface.

The planned outcome is improved information about what volcanic activity might look like should Mount Edgecumbe, known as L鈥檜x Shaa in the local Ling铆t language, become restless again.

Knowing the depths of magma-accumulating structures is key if data indicates activity is happening.

鈥淭hen we could help figure out if this activity is likely to lead to an eruption,鈥 University of 91视频 Fairbanks professor Jessica Larsen said.

Larsen is leading a three-year, $558,000 project funded by the National Science Foundation. Others involved include UAF professor Ronni Grapenthin, UAF graduate student researcher Claire Puleio and research assistant professor Julie Elliott of Michigan State University. The work is also in partnership with the Sitka Tribe of 91视频 and the Sitka Sound Science Center.

Larsen and Grapenthin are with the UAF Geophysical Institute and UAF College of Natural Science and Mathematics.

Filling an info gap

The long-quiet volcano near Sitka, a community of about 8,500 people that is heavily visited by summer tourists, became of high interest to scientists on April 11, 2022, when a swarm of earthquakes occurred on the island where Edgecumbe sits. 

that year by the showed magma had risen to about 6 miles from a depth of about 12 miles and caused significant surface deformation, both uplift and a depression.

Four scientists on summit of Mount Edgecumbe
Photo by Rod Boyce
Members of an international science team work on the summit of Mount Edgecumbe volcano in June 2023.

鈥淎bove 6 miles we don鈥檛 have much information,鈥 said Larsen, who is also the Geophysical Institute鈥檚 associate director.

Mount Edgecumbe, at 3,200 feet, is on Kruzof Island on the west side of Sitka Sound.

The volcano last erupted about 4,000 years ago. Analysis of rocks in the area show they were ejected in a highly explosive event caused by the interaction of magma with an external water source.

The seismic and Global Navigation Satellite System stations on the volcano in September 2023. The observatory is a joint program of the Geophysical Institute, U.S. Geological Survey and the 91视频 Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys.

The new work consists of a more detailed review of Mount Edgecumbe鈥檚 surface deformation history back to the 1990s, determination of the area鈥檚 tectonics, and creation of small bits of Edgecumbe-like magma in the UAF Geophysical Institute鈥檚 Petrology Laboratory. Elliott, of Michigan State, will focus on Edgecumbe鈥檚 tectonic environment.

鈥淭his will help us get a more realistic understanding of the subsurface shallow magmatic system,鈥 said Grapenthin, who specializes in geodesy, the study of changes in Earth鈥檚 surface.

A mysterious mountain

Edgecumbe is unique, Larsen said, because it sits near a transform fault. This is a type of plate boundary in which two plates can slide past each other horizontally.

The fault type is generally considered a volcanic dud.

鈥淲ith the two plates sliding past each other, there鈥檚 no obvious way to make magma in Earth鈥檚 mantle,鈥 Larsen said.

Volcanoes are mostly found along subduction zones, where one tectonic plate is sliding under another and melting. The Aleutian Trench is one example, where the Pacific Plate slides under the North American Plate to create a string of volcanoes known as the Aleutian Arc.

The science team has a working theory about Mount Edgecumbe: that the fault on which the volcano sits is affected by another fault, causing Edgecumbe鈥檚 fault to rotate and pull apart in an isolated area in a process called local extension.

Local extension causes the Earth鈥檚 crust to thin, which lessens pressure far below in the mantle and lowers the mantle rock鈥檚 melting point.

鈥淭hen you can get a little bit of mantle flow or heat flow rising toward the crust,鈥 Larsen said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the most simple explanation for what鈥檚 going on, but there hasn鈥檛 been enough of a concentrated look at the area鈥檚 tectonics to know.鈥

Claire Puleio makes magma at UAF
Photo by Eric Marshall
Claire Puleio, a graduate student researcher at the UAF Geophysical Institute, quenches a superheated sample Sept. 17, 2025, as part of the latest research into Mount Edgecumbe volcano.

Making magma

Puleio has been recreating tiny magma specks to learn where similar material might be stored in Mount Edgecumbe鈥檚 system.

鈥淲e鈥檙e making new rocks and we鈥檙e seeing what minerals grow in them,鈥 she said.

In the lab, she heats and pressurizes surface rock from the volcano to produce minerals and glass that match that of ejecta from one of Edgecumbe鈥檚 eruptions. With a match, Puleio will know the pressure-temperature combination that created the ejecta sample.

And that will help scientists understand this curious volcano. A search of global volcano catalogs didn鈥檛 produce anything similar, Larsen said.

 鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing like Mount Edgecumbe.鈥

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Jessica Larsen, jflarsen@alaska.edu; Ronni Grapenthin, rgrapenthin@alaska.edu

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