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São Jorge

Sao Jorge

Frattura eruttiva · Portugal · 1053 m

The Pico da Velha cone is seen in this view of the interior of the island of São Jorge. The linear island is 54 km long and only about 6 km wide at its widest point. This cone is one of many along a volcanic ridge down the axis of the island. Eruptions recorded since 1580 have produced lava flows that reached the ocean, and submarine eruptions were reported from vents off the southern and southwestern coasts.
The Pico da Velha cone is seen in this view of the interior of the island of São Jorge. The linear island is 54 km long and only about 6 km wide at its widest point. This cone is one of many along a volcanic ridge down the axis of the island. Eruptions recorded since 1580 have produced lava flows that reached the ocean, and submarine eruptions were reported from vents off the southern and southwestern coasts. · Foto: Photo by Luís A. da Silveira, 2007 (Wikimedia Commons). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Frattura eruttiva
Paese
Portugal
Regione
Atlantic Ocean Volcanic Regions / Azores-Terceira Rift Volcanic Province
Altitudine
1053 m
Coordinate
38.650, -28.080
Ultima eruzione
1902
Contesto tettonico
Rift zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Forma vulcanica
Cluster
Roccia principale
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Sintesi geologica

The dominantly basaltic São Jorge Island is 55 km long and 6.5 km wide. It was formed by fissure eruptions beginning in the eastern part of the island. The western two-thirds of the island contains youthful, fissure-fed lava flows resembling those on neighboring Pico Island. Lava effused from three locations above the south-central coast during 1580, producing flows that reached the ocean. In 1808 a series of explosions took place from vents along the south-central crest of the island; one of the vents produced a lava flow that reached the southern coast. Submarine eruptions have also been reported on several occasions from a submarine ridge to the SE. The 1964 event offshore W of Velas was considered "probable" by Madiera and Brum da Silveira (2003), who also provided 14C dates for several other Holocene eruptions.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

Riassunto breve — apri l'articolo completo per maggiori dettagli.

São Jorge è un'isola appartenente all'arcipelago delle Azzorre.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Leggi l'articolo completo

Storia delle eruzioni

Riepilogo (VEI nel tempo)
Fai clic su una barra per vedere le singole eruzioni
2137 BCE~1942 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?402~597 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?1183~1378 · 2 eruzioni · VEI max. ?1378~1573 · 2 eruzioni · VEI max. ?1573~1769 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 31769~1964 · 4 eruzioni · VEI max. 22137 BCE1161 BCE184 BCE7921769

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 1964VEI ?Stima geologica
    1964-02-18 – 1964-02-18
    Submarine off SW coast
  2. 1902VEI 0Osservata
    1902-05-07 – 1902-05-08
    Submarine, ~27 km ESE of Ponta do Topo
  3. 1808VEI 1Osservata
    1808-05-01 – 1808-06-10
    Sao Jorge
  4. 1800VEI 2Osservata
    1800-06-24 – 1800-06-25
    Submarine, ~35 km SE of Ponta do Topo
  5. 1580VEI 3Osservata
    1580-05-01 – 1580-08-30
    Sao Jorge (SW side)
  6. 1483VEI ?Stima geologica
    1483 – In corso
    Sao Jorge
  7. 1426VEI ?Stima geologica
    1426 – In corso
    Sao Jorge
  8. 1293VEI ?Stima geologica
    1293 – In corso
    Sao Jorge
  9. 1282VEI ?Stima geologica
    1282 – In corso
    Sao Jorge
  10. 412VEI ?Stima geologica
    412 – In corso
    Sao Jorge
  11. 2137 a.C.VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 2137 – In corso
    Sao Jorge

Link esterni

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