Arsia Mons Summit

Scaled Image

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU

About this image

A large volcanic crater known as a caldera is located at the summit of all of the Tharsis volcanoes. These calderas are produced by massive volcanic explosions and collapse.Today's VIS image shows part of the summit caldera of Arsia Mons. A small volcanic vent is visible on the caldera floor. It is not uncommon for calderas to have "flat" floors after the final explosive eruption the empties the subsurface magma chamber. There may still be some magma or superheated rock left after the collapse that will fill in part of the depression. Additionally, over time erosion will work to level the topography. Within the Arsia Mons caldera there was renewed activity from several small vents that occurred along the alignment of the NE/SW trend of the three large volcanoes. This ongoing, low volume activity is similar to the lava lake in Kilauea in Hawaii. Arsia Mons is the southernmost of the Tharsis volcanoes. It is 450 km (270 miles) in diameter, almost 20 km (12 miles) high, and the summit caldera is 120 km (72 miles) wide. For comparison, the largest volcano on Earth is Mauna Loa. From its base on the sea floor, Mauna Loa measures only 6.3 miles high and 75 miles in diameter.The Arsia Mons summit caldera is larger than many volcanoes on Earth.

Please see the THEMIS Data Citation Note for details on crediting THEMIS images. 

Context

-8.80956
240.428
105610
2025-10-05 05:00
Tue, 2026-07-14
VIS
512 pixels (17 km)
1824 pixels (61 km)
0.033545 km/pixel
0.0339592 km/pixel

Downloads

PNG | JPEG (high res) | JPEG (reduced res) | PDF | TIFF