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San Salvador Volcano

San Salvador

Stratovolcano · El Salvador · 1893m

San Salvador volcano rises above the capital city of El Salvador. The broader peak to the left is the Boquerón edifice, which has grown within the 6-km-wide crater of the older El Picacho edifice (the peak to the right). Most of the four pre-1917 eruptions recorded at San Salvador since the 16th century have occurred at flank vents.
San Salvador volcano rises above the capital city of El Salvador. The broader peak to the left is the Boquerón edifice, which has grown within the 6-km-wide crater of the older El Picacho edifice (the peak to the right). Most of the four pre-1917 eruptions recorded at San Salvador since the 16th century have occurred at flank vents. · Photo: Photo by Rick Wunderman, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Stratovolcano
Country
El Salvador
Region
Middle America-Caribbean Volcanic Regions / Central America Volcanic Arc
Elevation
1893m
Coordinates
13.734, -89.294
Last eruption
1917
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Composite
Major rock type
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Geological summary

The massive compound San Salvador volcano dominates the landscape W of El Salvador's capital city of San Salvador. The dominantly andesitic Boquerón stratovolcano has grown within a 6-km-wide caldera whose rim is partially exposed at Picacho and Jabalí peaks, which themselves were formed by collapse of an older edifice about 40,000 years ago. The summit of Boquerón is truncated by a steep-walled crater 1.5 km wide and ~500 m deep that formed during a major eruption around 800 years ago. It contained a crater lake prior to an eruption during 1917 that formed a small cinder cone on the crater floor; a major N-flank lava flow also erupted in this year. Three fracture zones that extend beyond the base of the volcano have been the locus for numerous flank eruptions, including two that formed maars on the WNW and SE sides. Most of the four historical eruptions recorded since the 16th century have originated from flank vents, including two in the 17th century from the NW-flank cone of El Playón, during which explosions and a lava flow damaged inhabited areas.

From Wikipedia

The San Salvador Volcano is a stratovolcano situated northwest to the city of San Salvador. The crater has been nearly filled with a relatively newer edifice, the Boquerón volcano. San Salvador is adjacent to the volcano and the western section of the city actually lies among its slopes. Due to this close proximity, any geological activity of the volcano, whether eruptive or not, has the potential to result in catastrophic destruction and death to the city. Despite this, the volcano is iconic of the city, and several TV and radio antennas are situated on the El Picacho peaks and the crater of Boqueron. El Picacho, the prominent peak is the highest elevation.

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Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
640~768 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 31151~1279 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 41534~1662 · 2 eruptions · max VEI 31789~1917 · 2 eruptions · max VEI 3640895127915341789

Detailed timeline

  1. 1917VEI 3Observed
    1917-06-07 – 1917-11
    Boquerón summit and north flank
  2. 1806VEI 0Geological estimate
    1806 – Ongoing
    El Playón ?
  3. 1658VEI 3Observed
    1658-11-03 – 1671-08
    NW flank (El Playón)
  4. 1575VEI 3Observed
    1575 – Ongoing
    Loma de Grandes Bloques
  5. 1200VEI 4Geological estimate
    1200 – Ongoing
    Boquerón
  6. 640 (±30 yrs)VEI 3Geological estimate
    640-08 – Ongoing
    NW flank (Loma Caldera)

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.