Cache Hill

{{Short description|Hill in British Columbia, Canada}}

Cache Hill is a cinder cone in northern British Columbia, Canada. It is thought to have last erupted in the Holocene period.{{cite web |url=http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/volcanoes/cat/volcano_e.php?id=svb_cah_036 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604164829/http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/volcanoes/cat/volcano_e.php?id=svb_cah_036 |archive-date=2011-06-04 |title=Cache Hill |publisher=Catalogue of Canadian volcanoes}} Once used as an airdrop for food and supplies by the Geological Survey of Canada, hence its name, it is located north of Raspberry Pass in Mount Edziza Provincial Park.{{cite bcgnis|id=9345|title=Cache Hill}}

See also

References

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{{Mount Edziza volcanic complex}}

{{Northern Cordilleran volcanoes}}

{{Interior Mountains}}

Category:Cinder cones of British Columbia

Category:Holocene volcanoes

Category:Monogenetic cinder cones

Category:Volcanoes of the Mount Edziza volcanic complex

Category:Hills of British Columbia

Category:Two-thousanders of British Columbia

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