[timeout:300][out:json]; ( node(around:1000,49.65000,-123.21000)[natural=peak][name]; way(around:1000,49.65000,-123.21000)[natural=peak][name]; rel(around:1000,49.65000,-123.21000)[natural=peak][name]; node(around:1000,49.65000,-123.21000)[natural=volcano][name]; way(around:1000,49.65000,-123.21000)[natural=volcano][name]; rel(around:1000,49.65000,-123.21000)[natural=volcano][name]; ); out center tags;
The Watts Point volcanic centre is a small outcrop of Pleistocene age volcanic rock at Watts Point in British Columbia, Canada, about 10 kilometres (6 mi) south of Squamish and 40 kilometres (25 mi) north of Vancouver, and just north of Britannia Beach. It is the southernmost volcanic zone in the Squamish volcanic field and of the Garibaldi segment of the Cascade Volcanic Arc. The latest research indicates that it is most likely a subglacial mound. It comprises a continuous mass of sparsely porphyritic highly jointed dacitic lava overlying the mid-Cretaceous Coast Plutonic Complex and overlain locally by clay and of glacial till.
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mountain (Q8502) | natural=peak |
Pleistocene volcanoes | natural=volcano |
Subduction volcanoes | natural=volcano |
Volcanoes of British Columbia | natural=volcano |