Cache Hill
Hill in British Columbia, Canada
Cache Hill is a cinder cone in northern British Columbia, Canada. It is thought to have last erupted in the Holocene period.[1] Once used as an airdrop for food and supplies by the Geological Survey of Canada, hence its name, it is located north of Raspberry Pass in Mount Edziza Provincial Park.[2]
See also
- List of volcanoes in Canada
- List of Northern Cordilleran volcanoes
- Volcanism of Canada
- Volcanism of Western Canada
References
57°31′54″N 130°40′15″W / 57.53167°N 130.67083°W / 57.53167; -130.67083
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- The Ash Pit
- Cache Hill
- Camp Hill
- Cinder Cliff
- Cocoa Crater
- Coffee Crater
- Eve Cone
- Exile Hill
- Icefall Cone
- Kana Cone
- Keda Cone
- Klastline Cone
- Mess Lake Cone
- Moraine Cone
- Nahta Cone
- Outcast Hill
- Ridge Cone
- Sidas Cone
- Sleet Cone
- Source Hill
- Storm Cone
- Thaw Hill
- Triplex Cones
- Twin Cone
- Walkout Creek centres
- Williams Cone
- Artifact Creek
- Ball Creek
- Bourgeaux Creek
- Chakima Creek
- Crayke Creek
- Elwyn Creek
- Flyin Creek
- Gerlib Creek
- Kadeya Creek
- Kitsu Creek
- Little Iskut River
- More Creek
- Nagha Creek
- Nido Creek
- Pyramid Creek
- Raspberry Creek
- Sezill Creek
- Shaman Creek
- Sorcery Creek
- Stewbomb Creek
- Tadekho Creek
- Taweh Creek
- Tenchen Creek
- Tennaya Creek
- Tsecha Creek
- Walkout Creek
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