Bogoslof Island or Agasagook Island (
Aleut: Aĝasaaĝux̂[4]) is the summit of a submarine
stratovolcano at the south edge of the
Bering Sea, 35 miles (56 km) northwest of
Unalaska Island of the
Aleutian Islands chain. It has a land area of 319.3 acres (1.292 km2) and is uninhabited. It is 1,040 meters (3,410 ft) long and 1,512 m (4,961 ft) wide, with a peak elevation of 490 feet (150 m). The stratovolcano rises about 6,000 ft (1,800 m) from the seabed, but the summit is the only part that projects above sea level.[1] The island is believed to be relatively new, with the volcano being entirely below sea level before 1796, and most of the presently 300-acre island being formed by eruptions since 1900.
History
The first known emergence of the island
above sea level was recorded during an underwater eruption in 1796. Since then, parts of the island have been successively added and eroded.[5] About 2,000 feet (610 m) northwest of Bogoslof, a small volcanic dome emerged in 1883 from the same stratovolcano and has become a stack rock formation known as
Fire Island. On the southwest side of Bogoslof, another dome erupted in 1796; it is now called Castle Rock. Other eruptions have occurred in 1796–1804, 1806–1823, 1883–1895, 1906, 1907, 1909–1910, 1926–1928, 1992, and 2016–2017.[1] The island is a breeding site for seabirds, seals, and sea lions. An estimated 90,000
tufted puffins,
guillemots,
red-legged kittiwakes and
gulls nest here.
20 December 2016: A series of short nearly-daily
volcanic eruptions started, producing towering
volcanic ash clouds and
volcanic lightning, changing the geography of the island. As there are no cameras or monitoring stations on the island and the area is usually
overcast, details were uncertain. However, when the weather became favorable, it was seen that a small vent slightly offshore of Bogoslof's northeast beach had erupted explosively, fracturing the original island in two, and forming a new, smaller island to the northeast.[7]
25 December 2016: Satellite images of the island showed that the island had fractured into three smaller islands centered on what was thought to be the active vent of the eruption, gaining a net 1.2 acres (0.0049 km2), compared to its previous area of 71.2 acres (0.288 km2). Bogoslof continued to grow in the following weeks, reaching a size of 108.0 acres (0.437 km2) on January 11, 2017, and merging again into a single island.
02:08 UTC on 20 February (17:08 AKST on 19 February): A significant explosive eruption began at Bogoslof volcano. Seismic and infrasound data showed a series of short-lived explosive pulses through 02:45 UTC; seismicity decreased slightly since then. Recent satellite images show a cloud as high as 25,000 ft asl.[8][9]
11 March 2017: Bogoslof was 242 acres (0.98 km2) in size, having more than tripled in size, and forming into a large circular island around the central vent, and would likely continue to grow.
10 May 2017: Bogoslof was estimated to have an area of about 319 acres or 1.3 square kilometers.
17 May 2017: An eruption sent ash 34,000 feet into the atmosphere.[10]
28 May 2017: Another eruption sent ash as high as 35,000 feet and raised Aviation Color Code to red, its highest level. Ash that rises above 20,000 feet is a threat to airliners in the area [11] The National Weather Service Alaska Aviation Weather Unit also issued an alert that the ash cloud may climb as high as 50,000 feet.[10]
30 August 2017: An eruption occurred, with slight volcanic activity continuing into early December, after which the volcano appeared to return to relative inactivity.