Mount Berlin was active from the
Pliocene into the
Holocene. The oldest parts are found at Wedemeyer Rocks and Brandenberger Bluff and are 2.7 million years old. Activity then took place at Merrem Peak between 571,000 and 141,000 years ago; during this phase eruptions also occurred on the flanks of Mount Berlin. After 25,500 years ago activity shifted to Mount Berlin proper and the volcano grew by more than . Over time, volcanic activity on Mount Berlin has moved in a south-southeast direction. Eruptions of Berlin include both
effusive eruptions, that emplaced
cinder cones and
lava flows, and intense
explosive eruptions (
Plinian eruptions) which generated
eruption columns up to high. Such eruptions would have injected tephra into the
stratosphere and deposited it across the southern
Pacific Ocean and the
West Antarctic Ice Sheet. The patterns of tephra deposition indicate that westerly winds transported tephra from Mount Berlin over Antarctica. During the last 100,000 years Mount Berlin has been more active than Mount Takahe, the other major source of tephra in the West Antarctic, but activity at Berlin was episodic rather than steady and was influenced by changes in magma supply and the way magma supply interacts with changes in the ice sheet, while a direct glacial influence on volcanic activity is not obvious until 10,000 years ago. The volcano underwent a surge in activity between 35,000/40,000 and 18,000/20,000 years ago. Despite their size, the eruptions at Mount Berlin did not significantly impact the climate. The eruption history of Mount Berlin is recorded in outcrops on the volcano, in a
blue-ice area on
Mount Moulton, away, at Mount Waesche, in ice cores and in marine
sediment cores from the
Southern Ocean. Several tephra layers found in ice cores all across Antarctica have been attributed to West Antarctic volcanoes and in particular to Mount Berlin. Tephras deposited by this volcano have been used to date ice cores, establishing that ice at Mount Moulton is at least 492,000 years old and thus the oldest ice of West Antarctica. Dusty layers in ice cores have also been linked to Mount Berlin and other volcanoes in Antarctica.
Chronology Among eruptions recorded at Mount Berlin are: • 492,400±9,700 years ago, recorded at Mount Moulton. A 443,000±52,000 years old lava at Merrem Peak may correlate to this eruption. • Tephras in the
Vostok Station ice cores of East Antarctica deposited 406,000 years ago may have came from Mount Berlin. •
Cinder cones at
Mefford Knoll have been dated to be 211,000±18,000 years old.
Potassium-argon dating there and at Kraut Rocks has yielded ages of 630,000±30,000 and 620,000±50,000 years, respectively. • 141,600±7,500 years ago, recorded at Mount Moulton. It may correspond to a 141,400±5,400 years old deposit at Merrem Peak. A 141,700-year-old tephra layer at Vostok has been related to this Mount Moulton tephra. • The Marine Tephra B, which has been identified in marine
sediment cores and the Dome Fuji ice core, was erupted by Mount Berlin 130,700±1,800 years ago. It is used as a
stratigraphic marker for the transition between
marine isotope stages 6 and 5. • 118,700±2,500 years ago, recorded at Mount Moulton and potentially also at
Talos Dome. Correlated deposits at
Siple Ice Dome indicate that this eruption was intense and deposited tephra over large areas. • 106,300±2,400 years ago, recorded at Mount Moulton. • 92,500±2,000 and 92,200±900 years ago, as dated by argon-argon dating of its deposits around Mount Berlin. A tephra layer in
Dome C and
Dome Fuji ice cores recovered during
European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica and dated to be 89,000–87,000 years old has been attributed to this eruption on the basis of its composition. The nature of the
trachytic tephra layer indicates that it was produced during an intense, multiphase eruption which may have led to compositional differences between deposits emplaced close and these emplaced far from the volcano. Deposits from this eruption have also been found in the
Amundsen Sea, the
Bellingshausen Sea, at a Vostok ice core and in marine sediments of the
continental margin of West Antarctica ("tephra A"). • A 28,500-year-old tephra layer at
Mount Erebus and in two ice cores of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. • 27,300±2,300 years ago, recorded at Mount Moulton. • Ages of 25,500±2,000 years ago have been obtained from two lower welded pyroclastic units that crop out within Mount Berlin crater. • Unwelded obsidian fallout units that crop out in Mount Berlin crater have been dated to be 18,200±5,800 years old. • 14,500±3,800 years ago, recorded at Mount Moulton. • A lava flow and tephra layers found both close to and away from Mount Berlin appear to have been produced during an extended eruption about 10,500±2,500 years ago. • 9,718
BP, as dated in the
Siple Dome A ice core. A
lava flow on Mount Berlin and tephras at Mount Moulton have a similar composition though no exact match has been found. Several tephra layers between 18,100 and 55,400 years old, found in Siple Dome ice cores, resemble those of Mount Berlin, as do tephras emplaced 9,346 and 2,067
BCE (interval 3.0 years) in the Siple Dome A ice core. The marine "Tephra B" and "Tephra C" layers may also come from Mount Berlin but statistical methods have not supported such a relationship at least for "Tephra B". A 694±7
before present tephra layer found in the TALDICE ice core in East Antarctica may come from Mount Berlin or from
Mount Melbourne and may have been erupted at the same time as an eruption of
The Pleiades.
Roosevelt Island has yielded glass shards that may come from a 227
CE eruption. == Last eruption and present-day activity ==