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Andean Volcanic Belt

The Andean Volcanic Belt is a major volcanic belt along the Andean cordillera in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. It is formed as a result of subduction of the Nazca Plate and Antarctic Plate underneath the South American Plate. The belt is subdivided into four main volcanic zones which are separated by volcanic gaps. The volcanoes of the belt are diverse in terms of activity style, products, and morphology. While some differences can be explained by which volcanic zone a volcano belongs to, there are significant differences within volcanic zones and even between neighboring volcanoes. Despite being a type location for calc-alkalic and subduction volcanism, the Andean Volcanic Belt has a broad range of volcano-tectonic settings, as it has rift systems and extensional zones, transpressional faults, subduction of mid-ocean ridges and seamount chains as well as a large range of crustal thicknesses and magma ascent paths and different amounts of crustal assimilations.

The andes mountains are one of the tallest. Map of the volcanic arcs in the Andes, and subducted structures affecting volcanism

Romeral in Colombia is the northernmost active member of the Andean Volcanic Belt.[1] South of latitude 49° S within the Austral Volcanic Zone volcanic activity decreases with the southernmost volcano Fueguino in Tierra del Fuego archipelago.

Volcanic zones edit

 
 
Map of the major Colombian (left) and Ecuadorian (right) volcanoes

The Andean Volcanic Belt is segmented into four main areas of active volcanism; the Northern, Central, Southern, and Austral volcanic zones, each of which is a separate continental volcanic arc.

Northern Volcanic Zone edit

The Northern Volcanic Zone (NVZ) extends from Colombia to Ecuador and includes all volcanoes on the continental mainland of these countries. Of the volcanoes in this zone, 55 are located in Ecuador, while 19 are in Colombia. In Ecuador, the volcanoes are located in the Cordillera Occidental and the Cordillera Real while in Colombia they are located in the Western and Central Ranges. The Pliocene Iza-Paipa volcanic complex in Boyacá, in the Eastern Ranges is the northernmost manifestation of the Northern Andean Volcanic Belt. The volcanic arc has formed due to subduction of the Nazca Plate underneath western South America. Some volcanoes of the Northern Volcanic Zone, such as Galeras and Nevado del Ruiz that lie in densely populated highland areas, are significant sources of hazards. It has been estimated that crustal thickness beneath this region varies from around 40 to perhaps more than 55 kilometres (34 mi).[2] Sangay is the southernmost volcano of the Northern Volcanic Zone.

The Geophysics Institute at the National Polytechnic School in Quito, Ecuador houses an international team of seismologists and volcanologists[3] whose responsibility is to monitor Ecuador's numerous active volcanoes in the Andean Volcanic Belt (which is part of the Ring of Fire) and the Galápagos Islands.

Central Volcanic Zone edit

The Central Volcanic Zone (CVZ) is a volcanic arc in western South America. It is one of the four volcanic zones of the Andes. The Central Volcanic Zone extends from Peru to Chile and forms the western boundary of the Altiplano plateau. The volcanic arc has formed due to subduction of the Nazca Plate under western South America along the Peru–Chile Trench. To the south, the CVZ is limited by the Pampean flat-slab segment or Norte Chico flat-slab segment, a region devoid of volcanism due to a lower subduction angle caused by the subduction of Juan Fernández Ridge.

The CVZ is characterized by a continental crust that reaches a thickness of approximately 70 km (43 mi).[2] Within this zone, there are 44 major and 18 minor volcanic centers that are considered to be active.[2] This volcanic zone also contains not less than six potentially active large silicic volcanic systems, which include those of the Altiplano-Puna Volcanic Complex, as are Cerro Panizos, Pastos Grandes, Cerro Guacha, and La Pacana. Other silicic systems are Los Frailes ignimbrite plateau in Bolivia, and the caldera complexes of Incapillo and Cerro Galán in Argentina.[2][4][5]

Southern Volcanic Zone edit

Map of the volcanoes of the Southern Volcanic Zone that erupted in the 1990–2010 period.

The South Volcanic Zone (SVZ) extends roughly from Central Chile's Andes at the latitude of Santiago, at ca. 33°S, to Cerro Arenales in Aysén Region at ca. 46°S, a distance of well over 870 mi (1,400 km). The arc has formed due to subduction of the Nazca Plate under the South American Plate along the Peru–Chile Trench. The northern boundary of the SVZ is marked by the flat-slab subduction of the Juan Fernández Ridge, which is believed to have produced a volcanic gap called the Pampean flat-slab segment in the Norte Chico region since the late Miocene. The southern end of the SVZ is marked by the Chile Triple Junction where the Chile Rise subducts under South America at the Taitao Peninsula giving origin to the Patagonian Volcanic Gap. Further south lies the Austral Volcanic Zone.

From north to south the Southern Volcanic Zone is divided into four segments according to the characteristics of the continental crust, volcanoes and volcanic rocks:[6]

  • Northern SVZ (NSVZ; 33°S–34°30′S)
  • Transitional SVZ (TSVZ; 34°30′S–37°S)
  • Central SVZ (CSVZ; 37°S–41.5°S)
  • Southern SVZ (SSVZ: 41.5°S–46°S)

In Central Southern Volcanic Zone and Southern Southern Volcanic Zone, magma ascent occur primarily by the Liquiñe-Ofqui Fault.[7]

The Principal Cordillera of Andes (east Santiago) rose in late Cenozoic and became extensively glaciated about one million years ago. This meant lavas from NSVZ volcanoes begun to be channeled along a network of glacial valleys ever since.[8] The Maipo caldera exploded about 450 thousand years ago, leaving behind copious amounts of ash and ignimbrite rock that can be observed today both in Chile and Argentina.[8]

During the Pliocene, the SVZ south of 38°S consisted of a broad volcanic arc. The area with volcanic activity 1 to 2 million years ago between 39°S-42°S was up to 300 km (190 mi) wide (if back-arc volcanism is included).[9] A reduction in the convergence rate of the Nazca and the South American Plate from 9 cm (3.5 in) per year to 7.9 cm (3.1 in)[9] per year 2–3 million years ago contributed to a narrowing of the southern SVZ that occurred possibly 1.6 million years ago.[10] The southern part of the SVZ retained vigorous activity only in the west, especially around the Liquiñe-Ofqui Fault Zone,[10] while eastern volcanoes such as Tronador and Cerro Pantoja became extinct.[9]

The magmas of modern (Holocene) volcanoes in the Transitional Southern Volcanic Zone are derived from heterogenous sources in the Earth's mantle. Many lesser parts of melts are derived from subducted oceanic crust and subducted sediments. Towards the east, in the backarc region, the degree of melting in the mantle that gave origin to volcanism is less as are the subducted crust influences.[11]

Several volcanoes of the SVZ are being monitored by the Southern Andean Volcano Observatory (OVDAS) based in Temuco. The volcanoes monitored have varied over time but some like Villarrica and Llaima are monitored constantly. In recent years, there have been major eruptions at Chaitén (2008–2010), Cordón Caulle (2011) and Calbuco (2015).

Austral Volcanic Zone edit

The Austral Volcanic Zone (AVZ) is a volcanic arc in the Andes of southwestern South America. It is one of the four volcanic zones of the Andes. The AVZ extends south of the Patagonian Volcanic Gap to Tierra del Fuego archipelago, a distance of well over 600 mi (1,000 km). The arc has formed due to subduction of the Antarctic Plate under the South American Plate. Eruption products consist chiefly of alkaline basalt and basanite.[12] Volcanism in the Austral Volcanic Zone is less vigorous than in the Southern Volcanic Zone. Recorded eruptions are rare due to the area being unexplored well into the 19th century; the cloudy weather of its western coast might also have prevented sightings of eruptions. The Austral Volcanic Zone hosts both glaciated stratovolcanoes as well as subglacial volcanoes under the Southern Patagonian Ice Field.

Volcanic gaps edit

The different volcanic zones are intercalated by volcanic gaps, zones that, despite lying at the right distance from an oceanic trench, lack volcanic activity.[13] The Andes has three major volcanic gaps the Peruvian flat-slab segment (3 °S–15 °S), the Pampean flat-slab segment (27 °S–33 °S) and the Patagonian Volcanic Gap (46 °S–49 °S). The first one separates the Northern from the Central Volcanic Zone, the second the Central from the Southern and the last separates the Southern from the Austral Volcanic Zone. The Peruvian and Pampean gaps coincide with areas of flat slab (low angle) subduction and therefore the lack of volcanism is believed to be caused by the shallow dip of the subducting Nazca Plate in these places. The shallow dip has in turn been explained by the subduction of the Nazca Ridge and the Juan Fernández Ridge for the Peruvian and Pampean gaps respectively. Since the Nazca and Juan Fernández Ridge are created by volcanic activity in Pacific hotspots (Easter and Juan Fernández) it can be said that volcanic activity in the Pacific is responsible for the suppression of volcanism in parts of the Andes.

The Patagonian gap is different in nature as it is caused not by the subduction of an aseismic ridge but by the subduction of the Chile Rise, the boundary ridge between the Nazca and the Antarctic Plate.[14]

Peruvian gap edit

Between the latitudes of 3 °S–15 °S in Peru the last volcanic activity occurred 2.7 million years ago in Cordillera Blanca.[15] The lack of volcanism in central and northern Peru is widely attributed to a side effect of the flat-slab (low angle) subduction of the Nazca Plate occurring there. While the subduction of the Nazca Ridge has often been credited for causing this flat-slab and hence the lack of volcanism, many researchers find the gap too wide to be explained by this alone.

One hypothesis claims that the flat-slab is caused by the ongoing subduction of an oceanic plateau. This hypothetical plateau named Inca Plateau would be a mirror image of the Marquesas Plateau in the South Pacific.[15]

Pampean gap edit

The Pampean gap or Norte Chico separates the Andes Central and Southern volcanic zones. A low subduction angle caused by the subduction of Juan Fernández Ridge has been pointed out as causing or contributing to the suppression of volcanism.

Magma Path Distribution edit

The distribution of magma paths in a volcanic system are typically controlled by the regional tectonic activity. In a typical setting, the magma path is thought to be parallel to the maximum stress (either in compressional or extensional stress regimes). In the case of the Andes, the maximum stress is oriented in the East-West direction as the Nazca Plate is subducted underneath the South American Plate in the eastern direction. Recent studies conducted by Tibaldi et al. have discovered that the magma paths and dyke distribution in the Andean Volcanic Belt are not parallel to the maximum stress (E-W direction). Instead, the magma path generally follows a North-South/Northwest-Southeast trend in the Andes. [16] Tibaldi et al. concluded that the magma path distribution is actually controlled by pre-existing structures and crustal weaknesses in the crust rather than the regional stresses.

Back-arc volcanism edit

Back-arc volcanism is a significant phenomenon in Argentine Patagonia and Mendoza Province. Flat-slab subduction along the Peru–Chile Trench during the Miocene has been pointed out as being responsible for back-arc volcanism in Mendoza and Neuquén Province during the Quaternary.[17] Notable back-arc volcanoes include Payun Matru, Agua Poca, Payun Liso, Pali-Aike Volcanic Field, Tromen, Cochiquito Volcanic Group and Puesto Cortaderas.

Other significant back-arc volcanism regions include the Argentine Northwest where the Galán Caldera is located and the Andean foothills of Ecuador's Cordillera Real, where a series of alkaline volcanoes like Sumaco develops.[2]

Geothermal activity edit

The Andean Volcanic Belt represents a large geothermal province, with numerous hot springs, solfataras and geysers associated with its volcanoes. Already in the pre-Columbian era, the indigenous peoples used the various hot springs as places of healing. The geothermal exploration in the Chilean Andes was pioneered in the 1960s,[18] although the site of El Tatio was investigated previously in the 1920s. Compared to neighboring Central America, the Andean region is poorly explored and exploited for geothermal resources.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Romeral". Volcano.si.edu. 29 March 2012. Global Volcanism Program
  2. ^ a b c d e Stern, Charles R (December 2004). "Active Andean volcanism: its geologic and tectonic setting". Revista Geológica de Chile. 31 (2): 161–206. doi:10.4067/S0716-02082004000200001. ISSN 0716-0208.
  3. ^ "Home – Instituto Geofísico – EPN". igepn.edu.ec. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
  4. ^ Ort, M.H. (1993). "Eruptive processes and caldera formation in a nested downsag collapse caldera: Cerro Panizos, central Andes mountains". J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 56 (3): 221–252. Bibcode:1993JVGR...56..221O. doi:10.1016/0377-0273(93)90018-M.
  5. ^ de Silva, S.L.; Francis, P.W. (1991). Volcanoes of the Central Andes. Berlin Heildelberg New York: Springer. p. 216.
  6. ^ López-Escobar, Leopoldo; Kilian, Rolf; Kempton, Pamela D.; Tagiri, Michio (1993). "Petrography and geochemistry of Quaternary rocks from the Southern Volcanic Zone of the Andes between 41 30'and 46 00'S, Chile". Revista Geológica de Chile. 20 (1): 33–55.
  7. ^ Hickey-Vargas, Rosemary; Holbik, Sven; Tormey, Daniel; Frey, Federick A.; Moreno-Roa, Hugo (2016). "Basaltic rocks from the Andean Southern Volcanic Zone: Insights from the comparison of along-strike and small-scale geochemical variations and their sources". Lithos. 258–259: 115–132. Bibcode:2016Litho.258..115H. doi:10.1016/j.lithos.2016.04.014.
  8. ^ a b Charrier, Reynaldo; Iturrizaga, Lafasam; Charretier, Sebastién; Regard, Vincent (2019). "Geomorphologic and Glacial Evolution of the Cachapoal and southern Maipo catchments in the Andean Principal Cordillera, Central Chile (34°-35º S)". Andean Geology. 46 (2): 240–278. doi:10.5027/andgeoV46n2-3108. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  9. ^ a b c Lara, L.; Rodríguez, C.; Moreno, H.; Pérez de Arce, C. (2001). "Geocronología K-Ar y geoquímica del volcanismo plioceno superior-pleistoceno de los Andes del sur (39–42°S)" [K-Ar geochronology and geochemistry of Upper Pleistocene to Pliocene volcanism of the southern Andes (39-42°S)]. Revista Geológica de Chile (in Spanish). 28 (1): 67–90. doi:10.4067/S0716-02082001000100004.
  10. ^ a b Lara, L. E.; Folguera, A. (2006). The Pliocene to Quaternary narrowing of the Southern Andean volcanic arc between 37° and 41°S latitude. Vol. 407. pp. 299–315. doi:10.1130/2006.2407(14). ISBN 978-0-8137-2407-2. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  11. ^ Jaques, G.; Hoernle, K.; Gill, J.; Hauff, F.; Wehrmann, H.; Garbe-Schönbeg, D.; Van den Bogaard, P.; Bindeman, I.; Lara, L.E. (2013). "Across-arc geochemical variations in the Southern Volcanic Zone, Chile (34.5–38.0°S): Constraints on mantle wedge and slab input compositions" (PDF). Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 123: 218–243. Bibcode:2013GeCoA.123..218J. doi:10.1016/j.gca.2013.05.016.
  12. ^ D'Orazio, M.; Agostini, S.; Mazzarini, F.; Innocenti, F.; Manetti, P.; Haller, M. J.; Lahsen, A. (2000). "The Pali Aike Volcanic Field, Patagonia: slab-window magmatism near the tip of South America". Tectonophysics. 321 (4): 407–427. Bibcode:2000Tectp.321..407D. doi:10.1016/S0040-1951(00)00082-2.
  13. ^ Nur, A.; Ben-Avraham, Z. (1983). "Volcanic gaps due to oblique consumption of aseismic ridges". Tectonophysics. 99 (2–4): 355–362. Bibcode:1983Tectp..99..355N. doi:10.1016/0040-1951(83)90112-9.
  14. ^ Russo, R. M.; Vandecar, J. C.; Comte, D.; Mocanu, V. I.; Gallego, A.; Murdie, R. E. (2010). "Subduction of the Chile Ridge: Upper mantle structure and flow". GSA Today. 20 (9): 4–10. doi:10.1130/GSATG61A.1. S2CID 129658687.
  15. ^ a b Gutscher, M.-A.; Olivet, J.-L.; Aslanian, D.; Eissen, J.-P.; Maury, R. (1999). "The "lost inca plateau": cause of flat subduction beneath peru?" (PDF). Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 171 (3): 335–341. Bibcode:1999E&PSL.171..335G. doi:10.1016/S0012-821X(99)00153-3.
  16. ^ Tibaldi, A. "Structural control on volcanoes and magma paths from local- to orogen-scale: The central Andes case".
  17. ^ Germa, A.; Quidelleur, X.; Gillot, P. Y.; Tchilinguirian, P. (2010). "Volcanic evolution of the back-arc Pleistocene Payun Matru volcanic field (Argentina)". Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 29 (3): 717–730. Bibcode:2010JSAES..29..717G. doi:10.1016/j.jsames.2010.01.002. hdl:11336/98912.
  18. ^ "Andean Volcanic Belt". 5 November 1997. Retrieved 19 July 2009.

External links edit

  • B and 11B behaviour in the Northern Volcanic Zone of the Andes. Insights on the devolatilization of the slab and related magma genesis processes.

andean, volcanic, belt, major, volcanic, belt, along, andean, cordillera, argentina, bolivia, chile, colombia, ecuador, peru, formed, result, subduction, nazca, plate, antarctic, plate, underneath, south, american, plate, belt, subdivided, into, four, main, vo. The Andean Volcanic Belt is a major volcanic belt along the Andean cordillera in Argentina Bolivia Chile Colombia Ecuador and Peru It is formed as a result of subduction of the Nazca Plate and Antarctic Plate underneath the South American Plate The belt is subdivided into four main volcanic zones which are separated by volcanic gaps The volcanoes of the belt are diverse in terms of activity style products and morphology While some differences can be explained by which volcanic zone a volcano belongs to there are significant differences within volcanic zones and even between neighboring volcanoes Despite being a type location for calc alkalic and subduction volcanism the Andean Volcanic Belt has a broad range of volcano tectonic settings as it has rift systems and extensional zones transpressional faults subduction of mid ocean ridges and seamount chains as well as a large range of crustal thicknesses and magma ascent paths and different amounts of crustal assimilations The andes mountains are one of the tallest Map of the volcanic arcs in the Andes and subducted structures affecting volcanism Romeral in Colombia is the northernmost active member of the Andean Volcanic Belt 1 South of latitude 49 S within the Austral Volcanic Zone volcanic activity decreases with the southernmost volcano Fueguino in Tierra del Fuego archipelago Contents 1 Volcanic zones 1 1 Northern Volcanic Zone 1 2 Central Volcanic Zone 1 3 Southern Volcanic Zone 1 4 Austral Volcanic Zone 2 Volcanic gaps 2 1 Peruvian gap 2 2 Pampean gap 3 Magma Path Distribution 4 Back arc volcanism 5 Geothermal activity 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksVolcanic zones edit nbsp nbsp Map of the major Colombian left and Ecuadorian right volcanoes The Andean Volcanic Belt is segmented into four main areas of active volcanism the Northern Central Southern and Austral volcanic zones each of which is a separate continental volcanic arc Northern Volcanic Zone edit The Northern Volcanic Zone NVZ extends from Colombia to Ecuador and includes all volcanoes on the continental mainland of these countries Of the volcanoes in this zone 55 are located in Ecuador while 19 are in Colombia In Ecuador the volcanoes are located in the Cordillera Occidental and the Cordillera Real while in Colombia they are located in the Western and Central Ranges The Pliocene Iza Paipa volcanic complex in Boyaca in the Eastern Ranges is the northernmost manifestation of the Northern Andean Volcanic Belt The volcanic arc has formed due to subduction of the Nazca Plate underneath western South America Some volcanoes of the Northern Volcanic Zone such as Galeras and Nevado del Ruiz that lie in densely populated highland areas are significant sources of hazards It has been estimated that crustal thickness beneath this region varies from around 40 to perhaps more than 55 kilometres 34 mi 2 Sangay is the southernmost volcano of the Northern Volcanic Zone The Geophysics Institute at the National Polytechnic School in Quito Ecuador houses an international team of seismologists and volcanologists 3 whose responsibility is to monitor Ecuador s numerous active volcanoes in the Andean Volcanic Belt which is part of the Ring of Fire and the Galapagos Islands Central Volcanic Zone edit The Central Volcanic Zone CVZ is a volcanic arc in western South America It is one of the four volcanic zones of the Andes The Central Volcanic Zone extends from Peru to Chile and forms the western boundary of the Altiplano plateau The volcanic arc has formed due to subduction of the Nazca Plate under western South America along the Peru Chile Trench To the south the CVZ is limited by the Pampean flat slab segment or Norte Chico flat slab segment a region devoid of volcanism due to a lower subduction angle caused by the subduction of Juan Fernandez Ridge The CVZ is characterized by a continental crust that reaches a thickness of approximately 70 km 43 mi 2 Within this zone there are 44 major and 18 minor volcanic centers that are considered to be active 2 This volcanic zone also contains not less than six potentially active large silicic volcanic systems which include those of the Altiplano Puna Volcanic Complex as are Cerro Panizos Pastos Grandes Cerro Guacha and La Pacana Other silicic systems are Los Frailes ignimbrite plateau in Bolivia and the caldera complexes of Incapillo and Cerro Galan in Argentina 2 4 5 Southern Volcanic Zone edit nbsp Nevados de Chillan 2003 Copahue 2000 Lonquimay 1990 Llaima 2008 2009 Villarrica 1990 2010 Chaiten 2008 2010 Hudson 1991 nbsp Map of the volcanoes of the Southern Volcanic Zone that erupted in the 1990 2010 period The South Volcanic Zone SVZ extends roughly from Central Chile s Andes at the latitude of Santiago at ca 33 S to Cerro Arenales in Aysen Region at ca 46 S a distance of well over 870 mi 1 400 km The arc has formed due to subduction of the Nazca Plate under the South American Plate along the Peru Chile Trench The northern boundary of the SVZ is marked by the flat slab subduction of the Juan Fernandez Ridge which is believed to have produced a volcanic gap called the Pampean flat slab segment in the Norte Chico region since the late Miocene The southern end of the SVZ is marked by the Chile Triple Junction where the Chile Rise subducts under South America at the Taitao Peninsula giving origin to the Patagonian Volcanic Gap Further south lies the Austral Volcanic Zone From north to south the Southern Volcanic Zone is divided into four segments according to the characteristics of the continental crust volcanoes and volcanic rocks 6 Northern SVZ NSVZ 33 S 34 30 S Transitional SVZ TSVZ 34 30 S 37 S Central SVZ CSVZ 37 S 41 5 S Southern SVZ SSVZ 41 5 S 46 S In Central Southern Volcanic Zone and Southern Southern Volcanic Zone magma ascent occur primarily by the Liquine Ofqui Fault 7 The Principal Cordillera of Andes east Santiago rose in late Cenozoic and became extensively glaciated about one million years ago This meant lavas from NSVZ volcanoes begun to be channeled along a network of glacial valleys ever since 8 The Maipo caldera exploded about 450 thousand years ago leaving behind copious amounts of ash and ignimbrite rock that can be observed today both in Chile and Argentina 8 During the Pliocene the SVZ south of 38 S consisted of a broad volcanic arc The area with volcanic activity 1 to 2 million years ago between 39 S 42 S was up to 300 km 190 mi wide if back arc volcanism is included 9 A reduction in the convergence rate of the Nazca and the South American Plate from 9 cm 3 5 in per year to 7 9 cm 3 1 in 9 per year 2 3 million years ago contributed to a narrowing of the southern SVZ that occurred possibly 1 6 million years ago 10 The southern part of the SVZ retained vigorous activity only in the west especially around the Liquine Ofqui Fault Zone 10 while eastern volcanoes such as Tronador and Cerro Pantoja became extinct 9 The magmas of modern Holocene volcanoes in the Transitional Southern Volcanic Zone are derived from heterogenous sources in the Earth s mantle Many lesser parts of melts are derived from subducted oceanic crust and subducted sediments Towards the east in the backarc region the degree of melting in the mantle that gave origin to volcanism is less as are the subducted crust influences 11 Several volcanoes of the SVZ are being monitored by the Southern Andean Volcano Observatory OVDAS based in Temuco The volcanoes monitored have varied over time but some like Villarrica and Llaima are monitored constantly In recent years there have been major eruptions at Chaiten 2008 2010 Cordon Caulle 2011 and Calbuco 2015 Austral Volcanic Zone edit The Austral Volcanic Zone AVZ is a volcanic arc in the Andes of southwestern South America It is one of the four volcanic zones of the Andes The AVZ extends south of the Patagonian Volcanic Gap to Tierra del Fuego archipelago a distance of well over 600 mi 1 000 km The arc has formed due to subduction of the Antarctic Plate under the South American Plate Eruption products consist chiefly of alkaline basalt and basanite 12 Volcanism in the Austral Volcanic Zone is less vigorous than in the Southern Volcanic Zone Recorded eruptions are rare due to the area being unexplored well into the 19th century the cloudy weather of its western coast might also have prevented sightings of eruptions The Austral Volcanic Zone hosts both glaciated stratovolcanoes as well as subglacial volcanoes under the Southern Patagonian Ice Field Volcanic gaps editThe different volcanic zones are intercalated by volcanic gaps zones that despite lying at the right distance from an oceanic trench lack volcanic activity 13 The Andes has three major volcanic gaps the Peruvian flat slab segment 3 S 15 S the Pampean flat slab segment 27 S 33 S and the Patagonian Volcanic Gap 46 S 49 S The first one separates the Northern from the Central Volcanic Zone the second the Central from the Southern and the last separates the Southern from the Austral Volcanic Zone The Peruvian and Pampean gaps coincide with areas of flat slab low angle subduction and therefore the lack of volcanism is believed to be caused by the shallow dip of the subducting Nazca Plate in these places The shallow dip has in turn been explained by the subduction of the Nazca Ridge and the Juan Fernandez Ridge for the Peruvian and Pampean gaps respectively Since the Nazca and Juan Fernandez Ridge are created by volcanic activity in Pacific hotspots Easter and Juan Fernandez it can be said that volcanic activity in the Pacific is responsible for the suppression of volcanism in parts of the Andes The Patagonian gap is different in nature as it is caused not by the subduction of an aseismic ridge but by the subduction of the Chile Rise the boundary ridge between the Nazca and the Antarctic Plate 14 Peruvian gap edit Between the latitudes of 3 S 15 S in Peru the last volcanic activity occurred 2 7 million years ago in Cordillera Blanca 15 The lack of volcanism in central and northern Peru is widely attributed to a side effect of the flat slab low angle subduction of the Nazca Plate occurring there While the subduction of the Nazca Ridge has often been credited for causing this flat slab and hence the lack of volcanism many researchers find the gap too wide to be explained by this alone One hypothesis claims that the flat slab is caused by the ongoing subduction of an oceanic plateau This hypothetical plateau named Inca Plateau would be a mirror image of the Marquesas Plateau in the South Pacific 15 Pampean gap edit Main article Pampean flat slab The Pampean gap or Norte Chico separates the Andes Central and Southern volcanic zones A low subduction angle caused by the subduction of Juan Fernandez Ridge has been pointed out as causing or contributing to the suppression of volcanism Magma Path Distribution editThe distribution of magma paths in a volcanic system are typically controlled by the regional tectonic activity In a typical setting the magma path is thought to be parallel to the maximum stress either in compressional or extensional stress regimes In the case of the Andes the maximum stress is oriented in the East West direction as the Nazca Plate is subducted underneath the South American Plate in the eastern direction Recent studies conducted by Tibaldi et al have discovered that the magma paths and dyke distribution in the Andean Volcanic Belt are not parallel to the maximum stress E W direction Instead the magma path generally follows a North South Northwest Southeast trend in the Andes 16 Tibaldi et al concluded that the magma path distribution is actually controlled by pre existing structures and crustal weaknesses in the crust rather than the regional stresses Back arc volcanism editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2010 Back arc volcanism is a significant phenomenon in Argentine Patagonia and Mendoza Province Flat slab subduction along the Peru Chile Trench during the Miocene has been pointed out as being responsible for back arc volcanism in Mendoza and Neuquen Province during the Quaternary 17 Notable back arc volcanoes include Payun Matru Agua Poca Payun Liso Pali Aike Volcanic Field Tromen Cochiquito Volcanic Group and Puesto Cortaderas Other significant back arc volcanism regions include the Argentine Northwest where the Galan Caldera is located and the Andean foothills of Ecuador s Cordillera Real where a series of alkaline volcanoes like Sumaco develops 2 Geothermal activity editThe Andean Volcanic Belt represents a large geothermal province with numerous hot springs solfataras and geysers associated with its volcanoes Already in the pre Columbian era the indigenous peoples used the various hot springs as places of healing The geothermal exploration in the Chilean Andes was pioneered in the 1960s 18 although the site of El Tatio was investigated previously in the 1920s Compared to neighboring Central America the Andean region is poorly explored and exploited for geothermal resources See also edit nbsp Volcanoes portal nbsp Geology portal nbsp Andes portal List of volcanoes in Argentina List of volcanoes in Bolivia List of volcanoes in Chile List of volcanoes in PeruReferences edit Romeral Volcano si edu 29 March 2012 Global Volcanism Program a b c d e Stern Charles R December 2004 Active Andean volcanism its geologic and tectonic setting Revista Geologica de Chile 31 2 161 206 doi 10 4067 S0716 02082004000200001 ISSN 0716 0208 Home Instituto Geofisico EPN igepn edu ec Retrieved 11 September 2015 Ort M H 1993 Eruptive processes and caldera formation in a nested downsag collapse caldera Cerro Panizos central Andes mountains J Volcanol Geotherm Res 56 3 221 252 Bibcode 1993JVGR 56 221O doi 10 1016 0377 0273 93 90018 M de Silva S L Francis P W 1991 Volcanoes of the Central Andes Berlin Heildelberg New York Springer p 216 Lopez Escobar Leopoldo Kilian Rolf Kempton Pamela D Tagiri Michio 1993 Petrography and geochemistry of Quaternary rocks from the Southern Volcanic Zone of the Andes between 41 30 and 46 00 S Chile Revista Geologica de Chile 20 1 33 55 Hickey Vargas Rosemary Holbik Sven Tormey Daniel Frey Federick A Moreno Roa Hugo 2016 Basaltic rocks from the Andean Southern Volcanic Zone Insights from the comparison of along strike and small scale geochemical variations and their sources Lithos 258 259 115 132 Bibcode 2016Litho 258 115H doi 10 1016 j lithos 2016 04 014 a b Charrier Reynaldo Iturrizaga Lafasam Charretier Sebastien Regard Vincent 2019 Geomorphologic and Glacial Evolution of the Cachapoal and southern Maipo catchments in the Andean Principal Cordillera Central Chile 34 35º S Andean Geology 46 2 240 278 doi 10 5027 andgeoV46n2 3108 Retrieved 9 June 2019 a b c Lara L Rodriguez C Moreno H Perez de Arce C 2001 Geocronologia K Ar y geoquimica del volcanismo plioceno superior pleistoceno de los Andes del sur 39 42 S K Ar geochronology and geochemistry of Upper Pleistocene to Pliocene volcanism of the southern Andes 39 42 S Revista Geologica de Chile in Spanish 28 1 67 90 doi 10 4067 S0716 02082001000100004 a b Lara L E Folguera A 2006 The Pliocene to Quaternary narrowing of the Southern Andean volcanic arc between 37 and 41 S latitude Vol 407 pp 299 315 doi 10 1130 2006 2407 14 ISBN 978 0 8137 2407 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Jaques G Hoernle K Gill J Hauff F Wehrmann H Garbe Schonbeg D Van den Bogaard P Bindeman I Lara L E 2013 Across arc geochemical variations in the Southern Volcanic Zone Chile 34 5 38 0 S Constraints on mantle wedge and slab input compositions PDF Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 123 218 243 Bibcode 2013GeCoA 123 218J doi 10 1016 j gca 2013 05 016 D Orazio M Agostini S Mazzarini F Innocenti F Manetti P Haller M J Lahsen A 2000 The Pali Aike Volcanic Field Patagonia slab window magmatism near the tip of South America Tectonophysics 321 4 407 427 Bibcode 2000Tectp 321 407D doi 10 1016 S0040 1951 00 00082 2 Nur A Ben Avraham Z 1983 Volcanic gaps due to oblique consumption of aseismic ridges Tectonophysics 99 2 4 355 362 Bibcode 1983Tectp 99 355N doi 10 1016 0040 1951 83 90112 9 Russo R M Vandecar J C Comte D Mocanu V I Gallego A Murdie R E 2010 Subduction of the Chile Ridge Upper mantle structure and flow GSA Today 20 9 4 10 doi 10 1130 GSATG61A 1 S2CID 129658687 a b Gutscher M A Olivet J L Aslanian D Eissen J P Maury R 1999 The lost inca plateau cause of flat subduction beneath peru PDF Earth and Planetary Science Letters 171 3 335 341 Bibcode 1999E amp PSL 171 335G doi 10 1016 S0012 821X 99 00153 3 Tibaldi A Structural control on volcanoes and magma paths from local to orogen scale The central Andes case Germa A Quidelleur X Gillot P Y Tchilinguirian P 2010 Volcanic evolution of the back arc Pleistocene Payun Matru volcanic field Argentina Journal of South American Earth Sciences 29 3 717 730 Bibcode 2010JSAES 29 717G doi 10 1016 j jsames 2010 01 002 hdl 11336 98912 Andean Volcanic Belt 5 November 1997 Retrieved 19 July 2009 External links editB and 11B behaviour in the Northern Volcanic Zone of the Andes Insights on the devolatilization of the slab and related magma genesis processes OVDAS website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andean Volcanic Belt amp oldid 1214627881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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