Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to site content
The National Library of Israel Logo - Link to Homepage

Authorities
authorityItemPage
שם מקום
הר געש הדסון (צ'ילה)

Hudson Volcano (Chile)

Enlarge textShrink text
  • Place
| מספר מערכת987007563620205171 Copied successfully
  • Save successful
    The item can be found in your Personal Zone
    שגיאה
    Log in to your account to save
Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
הר געש הדסון (צ'ילה)
Name (Latin)
Hudson Volcano (Chile)
Other forms of name
Cerro Hudson (Chile)
Volcán Hudson (Chile)
Coordinates
-72.96666667 -72.96666667 -45.91666667 -45.91666667 (gooearth )
See Also From tracing topical name
Mountains Chile
Volcanoes Chile
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata:Q1055899
Library of congress:sh 97003870
Sources of Information
  • Work cat.: 97114597: Naranjo S.J.A. La erupción del volcán Hudson en 1991, 1993:p. 5 (Hudson Volcano)
  • Volcanoes of the world:p. 149 (Hudson, Cerro; 45⁰90ʹS 72⁰97ʹW; stratovolcano, S. Chile)
  • GEOnet, May 6, 1997(Hudson, Cerro, mt., 46⁰04ʹS 72⁰55ʹW)
Wikipedia description:

Hudson Volcano (Spanish: Volcán Hudson, Cerro Hudson, or Monte Hudson) is the most active volcano in the southern part of the Southern Volcanic Zone of the Andes Mountains in Chile, having erupted most recently in 2011. It was formed by the subduction of the oceanic Nazca Plate under the continental South American Plate. South of Hudson is a smaller volcano, followed by a long gap without active volcanoes, then the Austral Volcanic Zone. Hudson has the form of a 10-kilometre-wide (6-mile) caldera filled with ice; the Huemules Glacier emerges from the northwestern side of the caldera. The volcano has erupted rocks ranging from basalt to rhyolite, but large parts of the caldera are formed by non-volcanic rocks. The volcano erupted numerous times in the late Pleistocene and Holocene, forming widespread tephra deposits both in the proximity of Hudson and in the wider region. Four large eruptions took place in 17,300–17,440 BP ("H0 eruption"), 7,750 BP ("H1 eruption"), 4,200 BP ("H2 eruption") and in 1991 AD ("H3 eruption"); the second is among the most intense volcanic eruptions in South America during the Holocene. A smaller eruption occurred in 1971. The 7,750 BP and 1991 eruptions had a substantial impact on the human population of Patagonia and (for the 7,750 BP eruption) Tierra del Fuego: The 7,750 BP eruption devastated the local ecosystem and may have caused substantial shifts in human settlement and lifestyle. During the 1991 eruption, volcanic ash covered a large area in Chile and neighbouring Argentina, causing high mortality in farm animals, aggravating an existing economic crisis, and reaching as far as Antarctica.

Read more on Wikipedia >

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp