본문으로 건너뛰기

Tata Sabaya

성층화산 · Bolivia · 5430m

Symmetrical Tata Sabaya stratovolcano towers to the north above the village of Pagador in the Altiplano of Bolivia.  Thick dacitic lava flows at the left partially cover a scarp from a major collapse of the edifice that produced a large debris avalanche which swept into the Salar de Coipasa, covering an area of more than 300 km2 south of the volcano.  The morphology of the volcano has been subsequently modified by dome emplacement (left and right) and hot avalanches.
Symmetrical Tata Sabaya stratovolcano towers to the north above the village of Pagador in the Altiplano of Bolivia. Thick dacitic lava flows at the left partially cover a scarp from a major collapse of the edifice that produced a large debris avalanche which swept into the Salar de Coipasa, covering an area of more than 300 km2 south of the volcano. The morphology of the volcano has been subsequently modified by dome emplacement (left and right) and hot avalanches. · 사진: Photo by Jon Davidson (University of Durham). · Wikimedia Commons
화산 유형
성층화산
국가
Bolivia
지역
South America Volcanic Regions / Central Andean Volcanic Arc
해발
5430m
좌표
-19.130, -68.530
마지막 분화
미확인
판구조 환경
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
화산 지형
Composite
주요 암석
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
지질학적 요약

The symmetrical Tata Sabaya towers above the northern end of the Salar de Coipasa in the Altiplano of Bolivia. A pyroclastic shield capped by lava domes was topped by effusive eruptions that formed the unglaciated andesitic stratovolcano. Collapse of this edifice produced a large late-Pleistocene debris avalanche that swept into the Salar de Coipasa and covered an area of more than 300 km2 S of the volcano, traveling up to 30 km. Tufa deposits on avalanche hummocks correspond to a ~12,000 year old high stand of the lake. Renewed eruptions during the Holocene constructed lava domes and flows that have restored much of the original edifice. Youthful lava flows extend down the NW and W flanks, and pyroclastic-flow deposits from partial collapse of the summit dome extend to the lower SW flank.

Wikipedia 요약

영어 요약

Tata Sabaya is a 5,430-metre (17,810 ft) high volcano in Bolivia. It is part of the Central Volcanic Zone, one of several volcanic belts in the Andes which are separated by gaps without volcanic activity. This section of the Andes was volcanically active since the Jurassic, with an episode of strong ignimbritic volcanism occurring during the Miocene. Tata Sabaya lies in a thinly populated region north of the Salar de Coipasa salt pan.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · 전체 기사 보기

분화 이력

상세 타임라인

분화 기록이 없습니다.

외부 링크

⚠ 참고용 정보입니다. 재난 대응에 사용하지 마세요.