This article originally appeared on nasa.gov
Mount Terror might sound like a place to avoid. But this Antarctic volcano is not as terrifying as its name implies.
From a geological perspective, the mountain itself is relatively benign. It is a shield volcano located on the eastern side of Ross Island and consists of numerous pyroclastic cones and lava domes. But the volcano is now extinct. The last known eruption occurred in the Pleistocene, and the mountainโs youngest igneous rocks are almost 1 million years old. In contrast, the neighboring Mount Erebusโthought to be the southernmost active volcano in the worldโcontains aย churning lava lakeย within its caldera.
The scale of Mount Terror, standing 3,262 meters (10,702 feet) above sea level, might be daunting to some people. The profile above depicts the mountainโs surface elevation along a path near its peak. Data for the elevation profile were acquired on June 17, 2021, with the Advanced Topographic Laser Altimeter System (ATLAS) on NASAโsย Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite-2ย (ICESat-2).
Notice that the left side of the profile (south of the island) is slightly higher than the right side (north of the island). This is because the Ross Ice Shelf stands higher above the sea surface than the sea ice. For reference, the satelliteโs orbital path is laid over a natural-color image acquired on November 8, 2021, by theย Operational Land Imager-2ย (OLI-2) onย Landsat 9.
But Mount Terror is not tall enough to deter people from climbing its peak and skiing its slopes. Even Mount Erebus, the taller of the two peaks at 3,794 meters (12,448 feet) above sea level, attracts a fair number of climbers. From afar, the islandโs two tallest volcanoes provide aย scenic backdrop for scientistsย working atย McMurdo Stationย andย Scott Baseย on the islandโs southern tip.
Mount Terrorโs name is unrelated to any of its physical attributes. Instead, it was named in 1841 by Sir James Clark Ross after his ship, the HMSย Terror. Both the HMSย Terrorย and HMSย Erebusย were part of numerous polar voyages, including three expeditions into Antarctic waters between 1840 and 1843.
NASA Earth Observatory images byย Joshua Stevens, using Landsat data from theย U.S. Geological Surveyย and ICESat-2 data from theย National Snow & Ice Center. Story byย Kathryn Hansen.