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San José

San Jose

Stratovulcano · Chile-Argentina · 6070 m

Volcán San José on the far left horizon rises to the north above ice pinnacles at the Nieves Negras pass on the Chile/Argentina border.  The summit of San José is formed by a cluster of six Holocene craters, pyroclastic cones, and blocky lava flows that lie within a series of elongated, 0.5 x 2 km wide nested craters.  Mild phreatomagmatic eruptions were recorded at San José in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Volcán San José on the far left horizon rises to the north above ice pinnacles at the Nieves Negras pass on the Chile/Argentina border. The summit of San José is formed by a cluster of six Holocene craters, pyroclastic cones, and blocky lava flows that lie within a series of elongated, 0.5 x 2 km wide nested craters. Mild phreatomagmatic eruptions were recorded at San José in the 19th and 20th centuries. · Foto: Photo courtesy of Oscar González-Ferrán (University of Chile). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Stratovulcano
Paese
Chile-Argentina
Regione
South America Volcanic Regions / Southern Andean Volcanic Arc
Altitudine
6070 m
Coordinate
-33.789, -69.895
Ultima eruzione
1960
Contesto tettonico
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma vulcanica
Composite
Roccia principale
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Sintesi geologica

Volcán San José lies along the Chile-Argentina border at the southern end of a volcano group that includes the Pleistocene volcanoes of Marmolejo and Espíritu Santo. The glaciated 6070-m-high Marmolejo stratovolcano is truncated by a 4-km-wide caldera, breached to the NW, that has been the source of a massive debris avalanche. San José is a 5856-m-high stratovolcano of Pleistocene-Holocene age with a broad 2 km x 0.5 km summit region containing overlapping and nested craters, pyroclastic cones, and blocky lava flows. Volcán la Engorda and Volcán Plantat, located SW of Marmolejo and NW of San Jose, have also been active during the Holocene. An 8-km-long lava flow traveled to the SW from the 1-km-wide summit crater of Espíritu Santo volcano, which overlaps the southern slope of Marmolejo. Mild phreatomagmatic eruptions were recorded from San José in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

Riassunto in inglese

San José Volcano is the stratovolcano that gives its name to a massive volcanic group, at about 90 km (56 mi) from Santiago de Chile at the end of the Cajón del Maipo on the Chile-Argentina border. It lies on the south end of an approximately 10 km (6 mi) x 5 km (3 mi) complex that includes the La Engorda, Espiritu Santo, Plantat and Marmolejo volcanoes, the latter of which is located on the Northern end of the group.

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Storia delle eruzioni

Riepilogo (VEI nel tempo)
Fai clic su una barra per vedere le singole eruzioni
1822~1836 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 21836~1850 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 11877~1891 · 2 eruzioni · VEI max. 21891~1905 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 21946~1960 · 2 eruzioni · VEI max. 218221850189119191946

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 1960VEI 2Osservata
    1960-07-02 – In corso
  2. 1959VEI 2Osservata
    1959-07-02 – In corso
  3. 1895VEI 2Osservata
    1895 – 1897
  4. 1889VEI 2Osservata
    1889 – 1890
  5. 1881VEI 2Osservata
    1881 – In corso
  6. 1838VEI 1Osservata
    1838 – In corso
  7. 1822VEI 2Osservata
    1822-11-19 – 1838

Link esterni

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