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Caichinque

Estratovolcán · Chile · 4458 m

Caichinque volcano forms a topographic high dividing lakes of Salar Capur (left) from Salar Talar (right).  More than a half dozen vents produced andesitic-to-dacitic lava flows, with young flows descending to the NE and SE from the 4450-m-high summit.  One prominent flow traveled 6 km to the east, forming two lobes extending into the Salar Talar.  Other youthful looking flows traveled to the west, forming lobes extending into Salar Capur, and SSW, dividing the two salars.
Caichinque volcano forms a topographic high dividing lakes of Salar Capur (left) from Salar Talar (right). More than a half dozen vents produced andesitic-to-dacitic lava flows, with young flows descending to the NE and SE from the 4450-m-high summit. One prominent flow traveled 6 km to the east, forming two lobes extending into the Salar Talar. Other youthful looking flows traveled to the west, forming lobes extending into Salar Capur, and SSW, dividing the two salars. · Foto: NASA Landsat image, 1999 (courtesy of Hawaii Synergy Project, Univ. of Hawaii Institute of Geophysics & Planetology). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Estratovolcán
País
Chile
Región
South America Volcanic Regions / Central Andean Volcanic Arc
Altitud
4458 m
Coordenadas
-23.949, -67.740
Última erupción
Desconocido
Contexto tectónico
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma volcánica
Composite
Roca principal
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Resumen geológico

Caichinque is a relatively small Pleistocene-Holocene volcanic complex that forms a topographic high dividing Salar Capur from Salar Talar. More than a half-dozen vents produced andesitic-to-dacitic lava flows, with young flows descending to the NE and SE from the summit. One prominent flow traveled 6 km to the E, forming two lobes extending into the Salar Talar. The youthful morphology of the flows suggested a prehistorical age (González-Ferrán, 1995), but de Silva (2007 pers. comm.) considered the volcanic complex to perhaps be as old as late Pleistocene.

Resumen de Wikipedia

Caichinque es un complejo volcánico que se extiende entre el salar de Talar y el Salar de Capur, emplazado en las altas cumbres de Los Andes en la Región de Antofagasta. Exactamente ubicado al Suroeste del Salar de Atacama, directamente al Sur del volcán Miñiques y al Sureste del Cordón de Puntas Negras forma parte de la principal cadena volcánica andina en esta área.

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Enlaces externos

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