San Salvador (volcano)
{{Short description|Complex volcano in El Salvador}}
{{No footnotes|date=December 2024}}
{{Infobox mountain
| name = San Salvador Volcano
| nickname = Quezaltepeque
| photo = Santa Tecla y volcán de San Salvador (6803608805).jpg
| photo_caption = The San Salvador volcano is instantly recognizable by its distinctive triangular crescent pointed apex, which has a dorsal fin-like shape.
| elevation_m = 1,893
| elevation_ft = 6211
| prominence_m = 1580
| prominence_ft = 5183.73
| parent_peak = Cerro El Picacho
| isolation_km = 4.08
| isolation_mi = 2.53
| country = {{SLV}}
| state_type = Departments
| state = {{hlist|San Salvador|La Libertad}}.
| coordinates = {{coord|13.734|N|89.294|W|type:mountain}}
| map = El Salvador
| topo =
| type = Complex
| age = Pleistocene
| geology =
| volcanic_region =
| volcanic_arc = Central America
| volcanic_belt =
| volcanic_field =
| volcanic_arc/belt =
| last_eruption = 7 June 1917
| normal_route = Drive and hike via El Boquerón Highway
| access = El Boquerón National Park
}}
The San Salvador Volcano (also known as Quezaltepeque or El Boquerón) is a stratovolcano situated northwest to the city of San Salvador. The crater has been nearly filled with a relatively newer edifice, the Boquerón volcano. San Salvador is adjacent to the volcano and the western section of the city actually lies among its slopes. Due to this close proximity, any geological activity of the volcano, whether eruptive or not, has the potential to result in catastrophic destruction and death to the city. Despite this, the volcano is iconic of the city, and several TV and radio antennas are situated on the El Picacho peaks and the crater of Boqueron. El Picacho, the prominent peak is the highest elevation (1,960 meters altitude).
Boquerón edifice
File:San Salvador From Space.jpg is pinned between San Salvador (volcano) and Lake Ilopango Caldera. The Pacific Coast is adjacent south of the city]]
File:Sansivar.jpg City from San Salvador volcano's highest point]]
The main edifice, known as the Boquerón edifice, formed between 700 and 1,000 years ago, filling up a former caldera. The crescent-shaped ridge on the northeast side of the volcano is a remnant of the caldera rim. The lavas of the Boquerón edifice contain more alkali elements and iron oxide than the lavas of the older edifice. Around 800 years ago, the present day crater was formed in a violent explosion. The crater, which gives it the present name (Boquerón means "big mouth" in Spanish) is 1.5 km in diameter and 500m deep. Within the crater around the upper walls, crops are cultivated by the locals who live on the volcano.
The magma chamber which the volcano sits upon contains a number of fissures which protrude along the flanks and sides of the volcano. The northwest (N40W) fissure has been the most active recently, with such significant eruptive events, such as the Loma Caldera eruption which buried the ancient village of Ceren and the eruption of El Playon (1658–71) which buried the town of Nexapa. The citizens relocated to Nejapa and nowadays the eruption is celebrated annually.
The most recent eruption in 1917 caused a flank eruption on the volcano along the N40W fissure. During this eruption, the crater lake inside the Boquerón evaporated and a cinder cone appeared, christened 'Boqueroncito'.
Gallery
File:Laguna Volcan San Salvador.jpg|A 1914 postal, with the image of the lagoon in the crater of San Salvador Volcano, El Salvador. The lagoon disappeared when the volcano erupted in 1917
File:Panoaa8.jpg|The massive San Salvador volcano dominates the landscape and skyline west of the city of San Salvador.
File:SanSalvadorVolcano.jpg|The massive compound San Salvador (volcano) dominates the landscape west of El Salvador's capital city of San Salvador.
File:Complete Skyline 2011.jpg|San Salvador skyline with the volcano behind it
File:Volcán_San_Salvador.JPG|A view of San Salvador volcano.
File:San Salvador downtown.jpg|View of San Salvador Volcano from downtown San Salvador
File:Estadio cuscatlan.jpg|San Salvador Volcano from Cuscatlán Stadium
File:Atardecer de San Salvador desde Los Planes de Renderos.jpg|San Salvador volcano towering over San Salvador city at night
See also
References
- {{cite gvp | vnum=343050 | title=San Salvador }}
- Williams, H., and Meyer-Abich, H., 1955 Volcanisim in the southern part of El Salvador: University of California Publication in geological Sciences v. 32 pp1–64
- Sofield. D., Eruptive history and volcanic hazards of Volcan San Salvador, in Rose W.I. et al., Natural Hazards in El Salvador: Bolder, Colorado, Geological Society of America Special Paper 375, pp 147–158.
- Fairbrothers G E., Carr M J., and Mayfield F G., Temporal Magmatic Variation at Boqueron Volcano, El Salvador. Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. v 67, pp 1–9 (1978)
External links
{{Commons category|San Salvador Volcano}}
- [http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/ElSalvador/Publications/OFR01-366/framework.html Topographical hazard zonation maps regarding the volcano and the city]
{{Central American volcanoes}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Mountains of El Salvador