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Volcanoes Stadium is a minor league baseball park in the northwest United States, located in Keizer, Oregon. It is the home field of the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes , formerly the Class A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants in the short-season Northwest League . [ 1 ]
The Volcanoes finished the year at 43–33, tied with the Southern Oregon Timberjacks. In a one-game play-off the Volcanoes bested the Timberjacks to earn the south division title. Salem-Keizer defeated the Boise Hawks in the best-of-three series en route to a Northwest League championship. In 2001, the Volcanoes won the south division title.
In addition to minor league baseball, Volcanoes Stadium has hosted the OSAA baseball championship and a Civil War baseball game between the University of Oregon Ducks and Oregon State University Beavers. Keizer has been a long supporter of its lone high school's sports teams, the McNary Celtics. The school has won multiple state titles in ...
The stadium also received new LED lighting and has events scheduled on the field through October. Volcanoes Stadium's new turf baseball field is booked every weekend through October Skip to main ...
Route information; Length: 500 mi (800 km) Main byway; North end: US 97 / OR 138 south of Chemult, OR: South end: SR 147 / SR 89 near Canyondam, CA: Tule Lake spur route; North end: US 97 / SR 161 near Dorris, CA: South end: Route 89 at Forest Service Road 15, Modoc National Forest, near Bartle, CA: Lassen Scenic Byway (loop road) North end
Name Elevation Location Last eruption meters feet Coordinates; Malumalu: Last 8,000 years Ta‘u-931: 3054: 30,000 years ago [15]: Ofu-Olosega: 639: 2096: 1866 unnamed submarine cone eruption
Interior of Amboy Crater showing a lava lake and the distant breach in the cinder cone rim. Interior of Amboy Crater from near breach showing lava lakes. Amboy Crater is a dormant cinder cone volcano that rises above a 70-square-kilometer (27 sq mi) lava field in the eastern Mojave Desert of southern California, within Mojave Trails National Monument.
Although the local people described Glacier Peak as a vital part of their storytelling and beliefs, when other volcanoes in the area were mapped, Glacier Peak was left out. In 1850 natives mentioned the volcano to naturalist George Gibbs saying that the volcano had once "smoked". [6] In 1898 the volcano was finally documented on a map. [6]