Chaitén
Chaiten
Caldera · Chile · 1122 m

- Tipo
- Caldera
- Paese
- Chile
- Regione
- South America Volcanic Regions / Southern Andean Volcanic Arc
- Altitudine
- 1122 m
- Coordinate
- -42.835, -72.651
- Ultima eruzione
- 2011
- Contesto tettonico
- Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
- Forma vulcanica
- Caldera
- Roccia principale
- Rhyolite
Sintesi geologica
Chaitén is a small caldera (~3 km in diameter) located 10 km NE of the town of Chaitén on the Gulf of Corcovado. Multiple explosive eruptions throughout the Holocene have been identified. A rhyolitic obsidian lava dome occupies much of the caldera floor. Obsidian cobbles from this dome found in the Blanco River are the source of artifacts from archaeological sites along the Pacific coast as far as 400 km from the volcano to the N and S. The caldera is breached on the SW side by a river that drains to the bay of Chaitén. The first recorded eruption, beginning in 2008, produced major rhyolitic explosive activity and building a new dome and tephra cone on the older rhyolite dome.
Sintesi da Wikipedia
Il monte Chaitén è un vulcano del sud del Cile nella provincia di Palena, all'estremo nord della Patagonia cilena.
Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Leggi l'articolo completo →
Storia delle eruzioni
Cronologia dettagliata
- 2008VEI 4Osservata2008-05-02 – 2011-05-31
- 1640 (±18 anni)VEI 4Stima geologica1640 – In corso
- 3100 a.C. (±220 anni)VEI 5Stima geologicaBCE 3100 – In corso
- 6650 a.C. (±1300 anni)VEI ?Stima geologicaBCE 6650 – In corso
- 7750 a.C. (±200 anni)VEI 5Stima geologicaBCE 7750 – In corso
Link esterni
⚠ Solo a scopo informativo. Non adatto a situazioni di emergenza.