Kerry JayDear Kerry,
The oldest volcano is billions of years old. Old rocks, a billion years or more, tend to be beat up a bit (or more). They might be folded and faulted. The might have their original minerals replaced by a new set of minerals. The original volcanic edifice (stratovolcano, shield, etc.) probably won't be recognizable. None of these would stop a volcanologist from getting all the information she could out of the rock. An age can be determined and the chemistry can tell a lot. Sometimes pillow lava or ropy pahoehoe lava can be found.
Volcanologists have found old volcanic rocks in the cratons of most continents. Here's a brief list of places and ages:
Canada: 3.5 to 2.8 billion years
Rhodesia (Zimbabwe): 3.4 billion years
South Africa: 3.3 billion years
West Australia: 2.8 billion years
West Australia: 3.1 billion years
Thanks for a good question.
Steve Mattox, University of North Dakota
Sources of Information:
Palfreyman, W.D., 1984, Guide to the geology of Australia: Bureau of
Mineral Resources, Geology, and Geophysics Bulletin
181, 111 p.
Wilson, H.D.B., and Morrice, M.G., The volcanic sequence in Archean shields: The Geological Society of Canada Special Paper Number 16, p. 355-374.
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