Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

A USGS-led expedition in the Aleutian Arc off Alaska will provide critical information on energy resources, underwater earthquakes and other hazards, seafloor habitats, and biological resources, including key fisheries, as well as potential seabed minerals. The science team is investigating a large, mostly submerged volcano that erupted explosively in 2016-2017.

Far out in Alaska’s Bering Sea, Bogoslof Volcano rises from the ocean floor—an underwater giant with just a sliver of land showing above the waves. Although it looks small from the surface, the volcano is massive beneath the sea, and it plays an important role in helping scientists understand how underwater volcanoes grow, erupt, and sometimes collapse. We’re currently aboard the Office of Naval Research's Research Vessel Atlantis, using the U.S. Navy's deep-sea submersible, the human-occupied vehicle Alvin (operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) to explore and collect samples from the seafloor around Bogoslof.

Media
Birds flying over the ocean with a mountain in the background
A group of Tufted Puffins taking flight near Bogoslof Island. Image courtesy of The Aleutian Arc: Integrated Exploration of Biodiversity at Priority Benthic Habitats (USGS/BOEM/NOAA/ONR). Photographer: Art Howard. 

Bogoslof’s most recent eruption, from December 2016 to August 2017, was one of the most dramatic volcanic events in recent Alaskan history. Over nine months, it produced at least 70 explosions. Many of these happened underwater, where magma and seawater reacted violently. The blasts sent ash clouds as high as 10 kilometers into the sky, disrupted air travel across the North Pacific, and repeatedly reshaped the island’s surfaces.

Bogoslof Island before the 2016-2017 eruption (left) and on March 11, 2017 (right).

 

 

On this expedition, we have used Alvin to collect rock samples from two different spots on the underwater flanks of the volcano. The first location appears to be part of an old lava flow, based on its shape and the thick layer of marine life growing on it. The second site is more mysterious—it might be a small volcanic cone, a block from an underwater landslide, or something else entirely. We don’t yet know how old these rocks are or exactly how they formed, but they will help us piece together Bogoslof’s long and complex history.

We also saw that both dive sites were covered in fine sediment, likely made up of volcanic ash and debris from past eruptions. These layers give clues about how material spreads across the seafloor and may also affect the stability of the volcano’s slopes.

 

 

Media
3D map of Bogoslof Volcano
3D view of Bogoslof Volcano. Image courtesy of The Aleutian Arc: Integrated Exploration of Biodiversity at Priority Benthic Habitats (USGS/BOEM/NOAA/ONR).

Bogoslof is unusual even among Alaskan volcanoes. It sits north of the main Aleutian volcanic arc and has a different chemical makeup than most of its neighbors. Nearly the entire volcano is underwater, which makes it hard to study and even harder to predict. Before this expedition, very few rock samples had ever been collected from its flanks.

 

Our work is helping to change that. By collecting samples directly from the underwater parts of the volcano, we’re learning how Bogoslof formed, how it changes during eruptions, and what kinds of hazards it might pose in the future. Each dive adds new pieces to the puzzle of this fascinating volcano hidden beneath the waves.

 

Was this page helpful?
OSZAR »