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Caldera de Bandama

Gran Canaria

Frattura eruttiva · Spain · 1950 m

Agricultural field on the floor of Marteles Maar are seen in the foreground, with several cinder cones in the background. These are part of a group of Quaternary monogenetic volcanoes in northern Gran Canaria. Eruptions of Holocene age have been restricted to the northern, primarily north-eastern, part of the island, including at Las Isletas, a peninsula on the NE coast.
Agricultural field on the floor of Marteles Maar are seen in the foreground, with several cinder cones in the background. These are part of a group of Quaternary monogenetic volcanoes in northern Gran Canaria. Eruptions of Holocene age have been restricted to the northern, primarily north-eastern, part of the island, including at Las Isletas, a peninsula on the NE coast. · Foto: Photo by Alexander Belousov, 2001 (Institute of Volcanology, Kamchatka, Russia). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Frattura eruttiva
Paese
Spain
Regione
Northern Africa Volcanic Regions / Canary Volcanic Province
Altitudine
1950 m
Coordinate
28.000, -15.580
Ultima eruzione
40
Contesto tettonico
Intraplate / Intermediate crust (15-25 km)
Forma vulcanica
Cluster
Roccia principale
Trachybasalt / Tephrite Basanite
Sintesi geologica

The circular 60-km-wide island of Gran Canaria in the middle of the Canary archipelago includes three major volcanic structures, and has been modified by caldera collapse, gravitational edifice failure, and extensive erosion resulting in steep-walled radial gorges called barrancos. Although the island is largely Miocene-to-Pliocene, middle Quaternary scoria cones and lava flows are found in the northern and eastern parts of the massive shield volcano, which is cut by a major NW-SE-trending rift zone that extends across the island and fed flows primarily to the NE. Basaltic cones and lava flows of Holocene age are situated within a NW-trending zone from Berrazales to Bandama, and at Las Isletas, a peninsula on the NE coast. One cinder cone was radiocarbon dated at about 3,000 years before present, and other cones and flows may be less than 1,000 years old.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

La Caldera de Bandama è il risultato di una enorme esplosione avvenuta nel cono vulcanico Bandama circa 1975 anni fa nell'isola di Gran Canaria.

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
4670 BCE~4474 BCE · 2 eruzioni · VEI max. ?1334 BCE~1137 BCE · 2 eruzioni · VEI max. ?1137 BCE~941 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?941 BCE~745 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?745 BCE~549 BCE · 3 eruzioni · VEI max. ?156 BCE~40 · 2 eruzioni · VEI max. ?4670 BCE3492 BCE2315 BCE1334 BCE156 BCE

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 40 (±75 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    40 – In corso
    Bandama
  2. 10 (±75 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    10 – In corso
    El Garañón
  3. 580 a.C. (±200 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 580 – In corso
    Doramas and El Lentiscal
  4. 590 a.C. (±200 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 590 – In corso
    Sima de Jinámar
  5. 620 a.C. (±200 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 620 – In corso
    Montaña Negra de Jinámar
  6. 920 a.C. (±200 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 920 – In corso
    Jabalobos
  7. 1010 a.C. (±100 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 1010 – In corso
    Pinos de Gáldar
  8. 1180 a.C. (±50 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 1180 – In corso
    Montañón Negro
  9. 1250 a.C. (±200 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 1250 – In corso
    Fagajesto
  10. 4630 a.C. (±75 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 4630 – In corso
    San Mateo
  11. 4670 a.C. (±75 anni)VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 4670 – In corso
    El Hoyo

Link esterni

⚠ Solo a scopo informativo. Non adatto a situazioni di emergenza.