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Montaña Timbaiba

Lanzarote

Fissure vent · Spain · 670m

Circular Caldera del Corazoncillo (center) on Lanzarote, also known as Caldera de Fuencaliente, was active during a two-week period in September 1730, at the beginning of the 1730-36 Montañas del Fuego eruption. Lava flows effused from NE-SW-trending fissures and numerous cones (background), and reached the western side of the island over a 20-km-wide front, covering an area of about 250 km2.
Circular Caldera del Corazoncillo (center) on Lanzarote, also known as Caldera de Fuencaliente, was active during a two-week period in September 1730, at the beginning of the 1730-36 Montañas del Fuego eruption. Lava flows effused from NE-SW-trending fissures and numerous cones (background), and reached the western side of the island over a 20-km-wide front, covering an area of about 250 km2. · Photo: Photo by Nicolau Wallenstein (Center of Volcanology, Azores University). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Fissure vent
Country
Spain
Region
Northern Africa Volcanic Regions / Canary Volcanic Province
Elevation
670m
Coordinates
29.030, -13.630
Last eruption
1824
Tectonic setting
Intraplate / Intermediate crust (15-25 km)
Landform
Cluster
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

The 60-km-long island of Lanzarote at the NE end of the Canary Islands contains the largest concentration of youthful volcanism in the Canaries. Pleistocene-and-Holocene cinder cones and lava flows erupted along NE-SW fissures are found throughout the low-altitude arid island and on smaller islands to the north. The largest historical eruption of the Canary Islands took place during 1730-36, when long-term eruptions from a fissure formed the Montañas del Fuego and produced voluminous lava flows that covered about 200 km2. The lava flows reached the western coast along a broad, 20-km-wide front. The villages of Maretas and Santa Catalina were destroyed, along with the most fertile valleys and estates on the island. An eruption during 1824 produced a much smaller lava flow that reached the SW coast.

From Wikipedia

Volcán de La Corona is a 609 meters (1,998 ft) high extinct volcano on the Canary Island of Lanzarote (Spain), near the village of Yé in the municipality of Haría. Its eruption, around 21,000 years ago, covered a large area of the northeast of the island with lava, creating the Malpais de la Corona and two of the island's most-visited geological attractions, the Cueva de los Verdes and the Jameos del Agua.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
500~632 · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?632~765 · 1 eruptions · max VEI ?1692~1824 · 2 eruptions · max VEI 3500765116214271692

Detailed timeline

  1. 1824VEI 2Observed
    1824-07-31 – 1824-10-24
    Tao, Nuevo del Fuego, Tinguatón
  2. 1730VEI 3Observed
    1730-09-01 – 1736-04-16
    Montañas del Fuego
  3. 700 (±50 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    700 – Ongoing
    Mazo, Santa Catalina, Corazoncillo
  4. 500 (±50 yrs)VEI ?Geological estimate
    500 – Ongoing
    Montaña de Juan Perdomo

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.