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Imbabura Volcano

Imbabura

Compound volcano · Ecuador · 4609m

Imbabura volcano rises above the town of San Pablo del Lago in this aerial view from the south.  The tip of Laguna de San Pablo is visible at the left.  The main edifice, Taita Imbabura ("Father Imbabura"), forms the summit.  Huarmi Imbabura ("Imbabura's Son") is a lateral lava-dome complex forming the grassy shoulder on the SW flank directly above the town of San Pablo del Lago in this view.   Activity at the dominantly Pleistocene Imbabura volcano continued into at least the early Holocene.
Imbabura volcano rises above the town of San Pablo del Lago in this aerial view from the south. The tip of Laguna de San Pablo is visible at the left. The main edifice, Taita Imbabura ("Father Imbabura"), forms the summit. Huarmi Imbabura ("Imbabura's Son") is a lateral lava-dome complex forming the grassy shoulder on the SW flank directly above the town of San Pablo del Lago in this view. Activity at the dominantly Pleistocene Imbabura volcano continued into at least the early Holocene. · Photo: Photo by Patricio Ramon (Instituto Geofisca, Escuela Politecnica Nacional). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Compound volcano
Country
Ecuador
Region
South America Volcanic Regions / Northern Andean Volcanic Arc
Elevation
4609m
Coordinates
0.258, -78.183
Last eruption
-5550
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Composite
Major rock type
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Geological summary

Imbabura volcano rises to the north above scenic Laguna de San Pablo in the Interandean valley about 60 km N of Quito. The main edifice, Taita Imbabura ("Father Imbabura") forms the summit, with Huarmi Imbabura ("Imbabura's Son") forming a lateral lava-dome complex on the SW flank. Activity at the Pleistocene Imbabura I edifice constructed a large andesitic stratovolcano and ended prior to about 43,000 years ago with a major collapse that produced a debris avalanche that traveled 16 km N. Subsequent growth of the Imbabura II stratovolcano continued at least into the early Holocene and typically consisted of growth and collapse of large-volume dacitic lava domes. A major eruption about 25,000 years ago produced a debris avalanche and possible lateral blast and was followed by growth of the Huarmi Imbabura lava dome. Historical reports of eruptions consisted of only mudflows and rock slides.

From Wikipedia

Imbabura is an inactive stratovolcano in northern Ecuador. Although it has not erupted for about 7,500 years, it is not thought to be extinct. Imbabura is intermittently capped with snow and has no permanent glaciers.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
5550 BCE~5550 BCE · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?5550 BCE5550 BCE5549 BCE5549 BCE5549 BCE

Detailed timeline

  1. 5550 BCE (±500 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    BCE 5550 – Ongoing
    Huarmi Imbabura

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.