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Chacana   »  Summary

Chacana

Chacana Photo

Country:Ecuador
Subregion Name:Ecuador
Volcano Number:1502-022
Volcano Type: Caldera
Volcano Status:Historical
Last Known Eruption: 1773 
Summit Elevation: 4643 m 15,233 feet
Latitude: 0.375°S 0°22'30"S
Longitude: 78.25°W 78°15'0"W

Chacana is a massive, eroded caldera complex of Pliocene-Holocene age that forms one of the largest rhyolitic centers of the northern Andes. The caldera is 32-km long in the N-S direction and 18-24 km wide in the E-W direction. Chacana was constructed during three cycles of andesitic-to-rhyolitic volcanism, with major eruptions about 240,000, 180,00, and 160,000 years ago. Dacitic lava flows were erupted from caldera-floor fissures between about 30,000 and 21,000 years ago. Numerous lava domes were constructed within the caldera, which has been the source of frequent explosive eruptions throughout the Holocene as well as historical lava flows during the 18th century. The massive Antisana stratovolcano was constructed immediately to the SE.

Global Volcanism ProgramDepartment of Mineral SciencesNational Museum of Natural HistorySmithsonian Institution

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