Mount Tendürek

Tendürek
Tendürek seen from space
Highest point
Elevation3,514 m (11,529 ft)
Prominence1,294 m (4,245 ft)
Coordinates39°22′N 43°52′E / 39.37°N 43.87°E / 39.37; 43.87
Geography
Tendürek
Ağrı and Van provinces, Turkey
Parent rangeArmenian Highlands
Geology
Rock age250,000 years
Mountain typeShield volcano
Last eruption1855

Mount Tendürek (Turkish: Tendürek Dağı; Armenian: Թոնդրակ, romanized: T’ondrak) is a shield volcano on the border of Ağrı and Van provinces in eastern Turkey, near the border with Iran. The volcano, which is mostly known for being near the supposed wreck site of Noah's Ark, is very large; its lava flows cover roughly 650 km2 (251 sq mi) across a swath of flat land. The mountain's two main features are the main summit crater Greater Tendürek, and a smaller crater known as Lesser Tendürek which lies to the east of the main crater. The slopes are very gentle and resemble a shield, after which the type is named. Mount Tendürek is known to have erupted viscous lava like that of volcanoes on the island of Hawaii.

The volcano is part of a volcanic group surrounding Lake Van that includes Nemrut Caldera and Mount Ararat. This group of volcanoes formed as a result of a continental collision that began roughly six million years ago and continued for the next few million years. Volcanicity in Tendürek started roughly 250,000 years ago and is still active. The most-recent eruption, a gas-and-ash eruption from the summit crater, occurred in 1855; this is also the most-recent eruption in Turkey. Since then, the volcano has mostly been geothermally active, emitting some steam and gases from the summits. Since 1993, the volcano's magma chamber has been subsiding, meaning the volcano is entering a dormancy phase.