
Boring Lava is a monogenetic volcanic field made of up
to 50 cinder cones an small shield volcanoes. Most of this volcanic
field is in the city of Portland and about 60 miles (100 km) west of
Mount Hood and the axis of the Cascades. Boring Lava volcanism began
about 2.7 million years ago and ended about 300,000 years ago. The
volcanic field is named for the town of Boring. This photo shows
Highland Butte a small shield volcano. Photo courtesy of the Oregon
Department of Geology and Mineral Industries. Special thanks to Rosemary
Kenney.

Mount Tabor, in Mount Tabor State Park, is a cinder cone in the Boring
Lava volcanic field. Part of the cones has been excavated to make an
amphitheater. Photo courtesy of the Oregon Department of Geology and
Mineral Industries.
Source of Information:
Wood, C.A., and Kienle, J., 1993, Volcanoes of North America: Cambridge University Press, New York, 354 p.
Images of Volcanoes
To VolcanoWorld