Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12544/907
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Samaniego Eguiguren, Pablo
Valderrama Murillo, Patricio Alonso
Mariño Salazar, Jersy
Van Wyk de Vries, Benjamin
Roche, Olivier
Manrique Llerena, Nélida
Chédeville, Corentin
Liorzou, Céline
Fidel Smoll, Lionel
Malnati, Judicaëlle
Tacna
Perú
2017-12-26T21:51:37Z
2017-12-26T21:51:37Z
2017-12-26T21:51:37Z
2017-12-26T21:51:37Z
2015-06
Samaniego, P.; Valderrama, P.; Mariño, J.; van Wyk de Vries, B.; Roche, O.; Manrique, N.; Liorzou, C.; Fídel, L.; & Malnati, J. (2015) - The historical (218 ± 14 aBP) explosive eruption of Tutupaca volcano (Southern Peru). Bulletin of Volcanology, 77(6), 1–18. Doi: 10.1007/s00445-015-0937-8
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12544/907
The little known Tutupaca volcano (17° 01' S, 70° 21' W), located at the southern end of the Peruvian arc, is a dacitic dome complex that experienced a large explosive eruption during historical times. Based on historic chronicles and our radiometric data, this eruption occurred 218¿±¿14 aBP, probably between 1787 and 1802 AD. This eruption was characterised by a large sector collapse that triggered a small debris avalanche (<1 km3) and an associated pyroclastic eruption whose bulk volume was 6.5–7.5¿×¿107 m3. Both units were emplaced synchronously and spread onto the plain situated to the northeast of Tutupaca volcano. The spatial and temporal relationship between the debris avalanche and the pyroclastic density current deposits, coupled with the petrological similarity between the juvenile fragments in the debris avalanche, the pyroclastic density current deposits and the pre-avalanche domes, indicates that juvenile magma was involved in the sector collapse. Large amounts of hydrothermally altered material are also found in the avalanche deposit. Thus, the ascent of a dacitic magma, coupled with the fact that the Tutupaca dome complex was constructed on top of an older, altered volcanic sequence, probably induced the destabilisation of the hydrothermally active edifice, producing the debris avalanche and its related pyroclastic density currents. This eruption probably represents the youngest debris avalanche in the Andes and was accompanied by one of the larger explosive events to have occurred in Southern Peru during historical times.
application/pdf
eng
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
urn:issn:1432-0819
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
Instituto Geológico, Minero y Metalúrgico – INGEMMET
Repositorio Institucional INGEMMET
Avalancha volcánica
Erupciones volcánicas
Piroclastos
Rocas volcánicas
Volcanes
The historical (218±14 aBP) explosive eruption of Tutupaca volcano (Southern Peru)
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Geociencias
DE
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00445-015-0937-8
Bulletin of Volcanology
Peer reviewed
Bulletin of Volcanology, v. 77, n. 6, pp. 1–18, 2015

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