# Mono–Inyo Craters

- **Country:** United States
- **Coordinates:** 37.877778, -119.006944
- **Id:** HR2739| designation = 706 702 2=Mammoth| access-date = 2008-12-11 }} | group = note}}
- **Age:** About 40,000 years
- **Url:** https://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/fs073-97/fs073-97.pdf
- **Date:** November 1998
- **Last1:** Hill|first1 = David P.
- **Last2:** Bailey|first2 = Roy A.|last3 = Miller|first3 = C. Dan |last4 = Hendley|first4 = James W. II
- **Last5:** Stauffer|first5 = Peter H.
- **State:** California
- **Title:** Future Eruptions in California's Long Valley Area—What's Likely?
- **Region:** Eastern California
- **Country:** United States
- **Geology:** Lava domes,cinder cones
- **Highest:** Crater Mountain{{#tag:ref|Geographically, Mammoth Mountain (11059 ft) is considered part of the Sierra Nevada mountain range, not the Mono–Inyo Craters mountain range, but volcanically, Mammoth Mountain and the southern part of the Mono–Inyo Craters share the same precursor activity. Explosion pits and fumaroles on the mountain formed in the last 1,000 years are considered part of the volcanic activity directly related to the Mono–Inyo Craters.{{cite ngs
- **District:** Mono
- **Image Alt:** Overhead view of a large lake with three islands. Small mountains extend south. Each has a label.
- **Length Mi:** 25
- **Publisher:** United States Geological Survey
- **Settlement:** Mammoth Lakes, California
- **Elevation Ft:** 9172
- **District Type:** County
- **Settlement Type:** Town

![Photo of Mono–Inyo Craters](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/73/Mono-Inyo_Craters_satellite_image-annotated.jpeg)

**Source:** https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mono_Craters (Wikipedia, CC BY-SA)
