Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

Amboy Crater and Lava Field

Monday, 20th June 2005 by Alex

Next up is the Amboy Crater, an extinct cinder cone in California’s Mojave Desert. It lies within a 70 square kilometre lava field, and it looks pretty impressive from up here!

Amboy Crater

Thanks to Art Jones.

10 Responses to 'Amboy Crater and Lava Field'

  1. 1. Safalra says:

    Anyone know what the gird of pits and ridges to the south east of the lava field are?

  2. 2. Jacob says:

    The roads around that area are labeled “Salt Evaperation Plant St”. So I am going to guess it is a salt evaporation plant. Looks very interesting.

  3. 3. John Hartnup says:

    Can anyone explain what the dark marking extending SouthEast of the crater is? At first I thought it was shadow, but the sun is coming from the wrong direction. Is this the path of a massive lava flow?

  4. 4. Chris G. says:

    John in response to your question, it may be ash residue that has blown from the North West winds and, over most likely many hundred years, has discoloured that area behind the volcano. Granted I’m not a geologist but it seems to be a plausible explanation to me.

  5. 5. The Govinator says:

    Chris G… looks like it to me, but it could also be winds having blown black volcanic dust in that direction. I zoomed out and there looks to be some smaller areas (vents maybe) that have the same tailing effect. This is a guess on my part

  6. 6. The Govinator says:

    I guess i should have said John not chris… I posted to late and didn’t read

  7. 7. Ruth says:

    I was there about a year ago, and there are fields of black lava rock extending away from the crater, which I suspect explains the “shadow area,” although I can’t say for certain that I remember them being primarily in one direction.

    I thought I had some good pictures of it, but I must not have uploaded them. This page describes the lava field, and you can see the rock I’m talking about from the ground in these pictures.

  8. 8. Juliet says:

    I just came back from camping in the Mojave and I can tell you it’s definitely lava flow. Here is a picture I took from a trail extending from Amboy Rd. looking west, toward the crater.

    And this is a close up of the rock surface.

  9. 9. Juliet says:

    http://img515.imageshack.us/img515/7079/img0383pu7.jpg

    http://img181.imageshack.us/img181/5416/img0384uu6.jpg

  10. 10. AL says:

    Juliet is correct. The lava flow extends miles away from the crater, though I am not sure how far it extends in all directions. You can access the crater from the north side so that gives you a good idea as to how far the lava field extends. You can only access the other side of the crater by hiking and climbing your way through the lava rocks and desert.

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