The Fish Canyon Tuff, made of
dacite, is uniform in its petrological composition and forms a single cooling unit despite the huge volume. Dacite is a silicic volcanic rock common in explosive eruptions, lava domes and short thick lava flows. There are also large intracaldera lavas composed of
andesite, a volcanic rock compositionally intermediate between
basalt (poor in silica content) and dacite (higher silica content) in the La Garita Caldera. The caldera itself, like the eruption of Fish Canyon Tuff, is large. It is oblong, . Many calderas of explosive origin are slightly ovoid or oblong. Because of the vast scale and erosion, it took scientists over 30 years to fully determine the size of the caldera. La Garita is considered an
extinct volcano. La Garita is also the source of at least seven major eruptions of welded
tuff deposits over a span of 1.5 million years since the Fish Canyon Tuff eruption. The caldera is also known to have extensive outcrops of a very unusual lava-like rock unit, called the Pagosa Peak Dacite, made of dacite that is very similar to that of the Fish Canyon Tuff. The
Pagosa Peak Dacite, which has characteristics of both lava and welded tuff, likely erupted shortly before the Fish Canyon Tuff. The Pagosa Peak Dacite has been interpreted as having erupted during low-energy pyroclastic fountaining and has a volume of about . These rocks were identified as lava because the unit has a highly elongated shape (1:50) and very high viscosity of the crystal-rich magma similar to those of flow-layered silicic lava. The Pagosa Peak Dacite formed by low-column
pyroclastic fountaining and lateral transport as dense, poorly-inflated
pyroclastic flows. ==See also==