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Mount
Baker (3,285 meters; 10,778 feet) is an ice-clad volcano in the North
Cascades of Washington State about 50 kilometers (31 miles) due east of
the city of Bellingham. After Mount Rainier, it is the most heavily
glaciated of the Cascade volcanoes: the volume of snow and ice on Mount
Baker (about 1.8 cubic kilometers; 0.43 cubic miles) is greater than that
of all the other Cascades volcanoes (except Rainier) combined. Isolated
ridges of lava and hydrothermally altered rock, especially in the area of
Sherman Crater, are exposed between glaciers on the upper flanks of the
volcano: the lower flanks are steep and heavily vegetated. The volcano
rests on a foundation of non-volcanic rocks in a region that is largely
non-volcanic in origin.
Mount Baker Volcano
Location: Washington State
Latitude: 48.786 N
Longitude: 121.82 W
Height: 3,285 Meters (10,778 Feet)
Type: Stratovolcano
Number of eruptions in past 200 years: 1 (?) 2
Latest Eruptions: 1820(?); 1843; 1846; 1853-54; 1858; 1859-60;
1863; 1870 3
Present thermal activity: Steaming fumaroles at flank and crater
locations.
Remarks: Increased heat output and minor melting of summit
glacier in 1975; some debris flows not related to eruption. History of
extensive pyroclastic flows... Heat emission increased markedly in
crater area in 1975 and produced warm, acidic meltwater and effusive
emissions of steam containing occasional traces of ash and sulfur dust.
Activity had diminished somewhat by 1978.
I took this picture of Mt Baker from the parking lot of
where I work; Safeco Life, in Redmond.

Seismic Activity: Not very active, but "warming up"

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