Upolu
Volcán en escudo · Samoa · 1100 m

- Tipo
- Volcán en escudo
- País
- Samoa
- Región
- Southern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Samoan Hotspot Volcano Group
- Altitud
- 1100 m
- Coordenadas
- -13.935, -171.720
- Última erupción
- Desconocido
- Contexto tectónico
- Subduction zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
- Forma volcánica
- Shield
- Roca principal
- Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Resumen geológico
The massive, basaltic shield volcano forming 75-km-long Upolu Island in Samoa is elongated in an E-W direction and was constructed during two periods of extensive eruptions during the Pliocene and Pleistocene. The most extensive activity during the Pleistocene took place along a 20-km segment along the central axis of the island. Following a lengthy period of erosion, the latest lava flows, at least three of which were estimated to be as young as a few hundred to a few thousand years old, were erupted from vents near the crest of the island at its center and western side (Stearns, 1944). One of the youngest flows reached the north-central coast along a roughly 1.5-km-wide front east of Vailele Bay, and another traveled down the Lefaga River channel and reached the SW coast at Lefaga Bay. Apolima Island off the western tip of Upolu is a Holocene tuff cone too young to be fringed by a coral reef, and other reef-free areas along the coastline may be formed by Holocene lava flows.
Resumen de Wikipedia
Upolu es una isla de Samoa. Está formada por un volcán que emerge del mar sin constancia histórica de erupciones. A principios del siglo XIX fue también conocida como Ojalava. Tiene 1.125 km² y es la más poblada de todas las islas samoanas. El aeropuerto internacional de Faleolo se encuentra al oeste de la isla mientras que la capital del país, Apia, se encuentra al norte.
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Historial de erupciones
Línea de tiempo detallada
No hay registros de erupciones disponibles.
Enlaces externos
⚠ Solo como referencia. No apto para respuesta ante emergencias.