Keluo

Keluo (Chinese:, p Kēluò) is a dormant volcanic field 310 km north-by-northwest of Daquijin in northeastern China. It is located at an intersection of regional lineaments trending northeast and northwest; the volcanoes were erupted through basement igneous and sedimentary rocks from the Jurassic to Cretaceous, through granite, and through pre-Permian metasediments. Like the Wudalianchi volcanic to its south, it contains high-potassium basaltic cinder cones.

The field possesses 23 cones over an area of 350 sqkm. There are reports of historical activity, but these remain unconfirmed. The morphology of a number of the cones—including Nanshan, Gushan , Jianshan , Dayishan , and Xiaoyishan —suggests their formation during the last 10,000 years (the Holocene). Most cones to the northeast, however, probably date from the Pleistocene to the Tertiary.

Other peaks include Dangzishan, Heishan, and Muhenanshan.