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Taburete

Estratovolcán · El Salvador · 1172 m

Taburete volcano (seen here from the SW) rises above the Pacific coastal plain, east of the Río Lempa. Taburete lies across an 800-m-high saddle from Tecapa volcano, visible to the left. The flat area to the left of the summit is a 150-300 m deep crater.
Taburete volcano (seen here from the SW) rises above the Pacific coastal plain, east of the Río Lempa. Taburete lies across an 800-m-high saddle from Tecapa volcano, visible to the left. The flat area to the left of the summit is a 150-300 m deep crater. · Foto: Photo by Lee Siebert, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Estratovolcán
País
El Salvador
Región
América Central y Caribe / Central America Volcanic Arc
Altitud
1172 m
Coordenadas
13.435, -88.532
Última erupción
Desconocido
Contexto tectónico
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma volcánica
Composite
Roca principal
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Resumen geológico

Taburete volcano rises above the Pacific coastal plain E of the Río Lempa at the SW end of a cluster of volcanoes between San Vincente and San Miguel volcanoes. Basaltic to basaltic andesite, it is elongated in a NW-SE direction and overlaps with Tecapa volcano to the NE. Its summit forms a prominent peak that rises above the southern crater rim. A well-preserved, 150-300 m deep summit crater has a low point on its eastern rim. A fairly recent lava flow descends the S flank (Williams and McBirney, 1955). Loma Pacha cone on the lower SE flank fed a thick lava flow that traveled 1 km SE. The age of the most recent eruption is not precisely known, and Weber and Wiesemann (1978) did not map its Holocene deposits.

Historial de erupciones

Línea de tiempo detallada

No hay registros de erupciones disponibles.

Enlaces externos

⚠ Solo como referencia. No apto para respuesta ante emergencias.