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Miravalles Volcano

Miravalles

Stratovolcano · Costa Rica · 2028m

A geothermal area is seen here on the Miravalles SW flank in 1988. The edifice is one of five post-caldera cones constructed within the Pleistocene Guayabo caldera. Lava flows cover the W and SW flanks. A small steam explosion was reported in 1946 and a producing geothermal field is located within the caldera.
A geothermal area is seen here on the Miravalles SW flank in 1988. The edifice is one of five post-caldera cones constructed within the Pleistocene Guayabo caldera. Lava flows cover the W and SW flanks. A small steam explosion was reported in 1946 and a producing geothermal field is located within the caldera. · Photo: Photo by William Melson, 1988 (Smithsonian Institution) · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Stratovolcano
Country
Costa Rica
Region
Middle America-Caribbean Volcanic Regions / Central America Volcanic Arc
Elevation
2028m
Coordinates
10.748, -85.153
Last eruption
1946
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Composite
Major rock type
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Geological summary

Miravalles is an andesitic stratovolcano that is one of five post-caldera cones along a NE-trending line within the broad 15 x 20 km Guayabo (Miravalles) caldera. The caldera was formed during several major explosive eruptions that produced voluminous dacitic-rhyolitic pyroclastic flows between ~1.5 and 0.6 million years ago. Growth of post-caldera volcanoes in the eastern part of the caldera that overtopped much of the eastern and southern caldera rims was interrupted by edifice collapse which produced a major debris avalanche to the SW. Morphologically youthful lava flows cover the W and SW flanks of the post-caldera Miravalles complex, which rises above the town of Guayabo on the flat western caldera floor. A small steam explosion on the SW flank was reported in 1946. High heat flow remains, and it is the site of a large developed geothermal field.

From Wikipedia

The Miravalles Volcano is an andesitic stratovolcano within the Miravalles Protected Zone, a nature reserve in Costa Rica. The Miravalles Volcano reaches an elevation of 2,028 metres (6,654 ft) and is the tallest volcano in the Cordillera de Guanacaste mountain range. It is the site of the most developed and productive geothermal field in Costa Rica, with a plant capable of generating 161.5 or 162.7 MW of power.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
5050 BCE~4817 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?1713~1946 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 15050 BCE3418 BCE1552 BCE801713

Detailed timeline

  1. 1946VEI 1Observed
    1946-09-14 – 1946-09-14
    SW flank (near Las Hornillas)
  2. 5050 BCEVEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 5050 – Ongoing

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.