Chaiten
Volcano name | Chaiten |
Volcano number | 1508-041 |
Volcano type | Caldera |
Volcano field? | No |
Volcano status | Radiocarbon |
Lat/Long | -42.833000 / -72.646000 |
Elevation | 1,122 m |
Volcano information
Chaitén is a small, glacier-free caldera with a Holocene lava dome located 10 km NE of the town of Chaitén on the Gulf of Corcovado. A pyroclastic-surge and pumice layer that was considered to originate from the eruption that formed the elliptical 2.5 x 4 km wide summit caldera was dated at about 9400 years ago. A rhyolitic, 962-m-high obsidian lava dome occupies much of the caldera floor. Obsidian cobbles from this dome found in the Blanco River are the source of prehistorical artifacts from archaeological sites along the Pacific coast as far as 400 km away from the volcano to the north and south. The caldera is breached on the SW side by a river that drains to the bay of Chaitén, and the high point on its southern rim reaches 1122 m. The last and still ongoing eruption started on 2 May 2008.