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Kerguelen

Kerguelen Islands

Estratovolcán · France · 1840 m

The Rallier du Baty Peninsula (bottom left) forms the SW tip of Kerguelen Island. It contains two subglacial eruptive centers, Mont St. Allouarn and Mont Henri Rallier du Baty. An active fumarole field is related to a series of Holocene trachytic lava flows and lahars that extend beyond the icecap. The snow-covered peak at the mid-right is late-Pleistocene Mount Ross stratovolcano. The Kerguelen Islands are composed primarily of Tertiary flood basalts and a complex of plutonic rocks extensively modified by glaciation.
The Rallier du Baty Peninsula (bottom left) forms the SW tip of Kerguelen Island. It contains two subglacial eruptive centers, Mont St. Allouarn and Mont Henri Rallier du Baty. An active fumarole field is related to a series of Holocene trachytic lava flows and lahars that extend beyond the icecap. The snow-covered peak at the mid-right is late-Pleistocene Mount Ross stratovolcano. The Kerguelen Islands are composed primarily of Tertiary flood basalts and a complex of plutonic rocks extensively modified by glaciation. · Foto: NASA International Space Station image ISS005-E-21805, 2002 (http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Estratovolcán
País
France
Región
Somalian-Antarctic Volcanic Regions / Kerguelen Hotspot Volcano Group
Altitud
1840 m
Coordenadas
-49.580, 69.500
Última erupción
Desconocido
Contexto tectónico
Intraplate / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Forma volcánica
Composite
Roca principal
Trachyandesite / Basaltic Trachyandesite
Resumen geológico

The Kerguelen Islands are composed primarily of Tertiary flood basalts and a complex of plutonic rocks. The trachybasaltic-to-trachytic Mount Ross stratovolcano at the S end was active during the late Pleistocene. The Rallier du Baty Peninsula on the SW tip of the island contains two youthful subglacial eruptive centers, Mont St. Allouarn and Mont Henri Rallier du Baty. An active fumarole field is related to a series of Holocene trachytic lava flows and lahars that extend beyond the icecap (Ballestracci and Nougier, 1984). Gagnevin et al. (2003) dated a trachytic ignimbrite that was considered to represent the last major eruptive event on the Kerguelen Archipelago at 26,000 +/- 3000 years.

Resumen de Wikipedia

Las islas Kerguelen constituyen un archipiélago ubicado en el océano Índico meridional, a unos 3900 km al sursudeste de Puerto Elizabeth, y a unos 2000 km al norte de las costas de la Antártida. Son posesión de Francia, y como tales están incluidas en las Tierras Australes y Antárticas Francesas. El archipiélago está constituido por una isla principal llamada Grande Terre de 6675 km², y más de 300 pequeñas islas, islotes y arrecifes que se disponen en torno a Grande Terre, lo cual otorga al archipiélago una superficie total de 7215 km².

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