- O'Leary Peak
Look for a dome volcano (O’Leary Peak) on the horizon in front of you. Dome volcanoes tend to have steep sides and rounded shape. - One Volcano Amid Many
At nearly 1,000 years young, Sunset Crater volcano is a geological infant, the latest development in a series of eruptions that have taken place here over the past 6 million years. It is only a small part of the impressive San Francisco Volcanic field of northern Arizona. From this point, three different types of volcanoes are visible. What makes a volcano tall or short, steep or gentle, or an eruption more or less violent? Mostly the magma’s stickiness or viscosity, which is determined by its chemical composition and gas content. Cinder cones, like Sunset crater and most of the 6000 or so volcanoes in this field, tend to be cone shaped with sides not steeper than 33 degrees. A cinder cone is literally a pile of loose fragments. It is easily eroded and will change shape, becoming less steep as it ages. - San Francisco Peaks
Composite or stratovolcanoes have sharp peaks or less steep sides. Mount St. Helens, Mount Fuji, and the San Francisco Peaks, seen here in the distance, are examples of this classic volcano type. - Introduction to the Trail
A sculpture garden of extraordinary shapes and forms awaits you on this walk through the lava flow and cinder fields. This moderate (1 mile, 1.6 km) trail has rough surfaces and takes you through lava flows and cinder barrens to the base - not to the top - of Sunset Crater. In person, you need water and sturdy footwear. There is also an alternate 1/4-mile (0.4 km), easy, wheelchair accessible paved loop.
Throughout this virtual trail guide, you will find benchmark pages and interpretive station pages. The benchmarks are those numbered in the guidebook, and the interpretative stations are text and photo displays placed along the trail itself. - Penstemon
Along the perimeter of the flow, a unique microhabitat for plants exists. In places, water collects on the surface of the flow and is then channeled through fractures to the edge where it locally benefits plants. White-barked aspen trees grow around the perimeter of the flow and along fracture systems. In area of deep cinder, like the dunes in the distance to your left, specialized plants have evolved. The Sunset Crater penstemon evolved new traits which allow it to live on cinder soils but also make this endemic plant dependent on this habitat. It cannot survive elsewhere. - 1 01
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