Congro Volcanic Fissural System
Congro Volcanic Fissural System (Sistema Vulcânico Fissural do Congro) | |
Sistema Vulcanica da Achada das Furnas | |
Fissure vent (Eurpção fissural) | |
Official name: Sistema Vulcânico Fissural do Congro | |
Name origin: congro, Portuguese for conger | |
Country | Portugal |
---|---|
Autonomous Region | Azores |
Islands | Eastern Group |
Location | Azores Platform, Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Atlantic Ocean |
Municipalities | Vila Franca do Campo |
Highest point | Pico das Éguas |
- location | Serra Gorda, Ponta Delgada, São Miguel |
- elevation | 874 m (2,867 ft) |
- coordinates | 37°45′22″N 25°24′25″W / 37.75611°N 25.40694°W |
Lowest point | Sea level |
- location | Atlantic Ocean |
- elevation | 0 m (0 ft) |
Area | 200 km2 (77 sq mi) |
Biomes | Temperate, Mediterranean |
Geology | Alkali basalt, Tephra, Trachyte, Trachybasalt |
Orogeny | Volcanism |
Period | Holocene |
The Congro Volcanic Fissural System (Portuguese: Sistema Vulcânico Fissural do Congro) is a system of scoria cones that build up the central region of the island of São Miguel (between the Água de Pau and Furnas volcanoes). This volcano is very young with most of it only 5000 years old.
History
The history of this volcanic system is dominated by basaltic, fissural, Hawaiian and Strombolian eruptions aligned in a dominantly west-northwest to east-southeast direction.[1] Many of the products of these eruptions are visible in systematic bands of thick bands of ash and pumice, resulting from many of the scoria cones located in the zone.[1] In the last 5000 years there is evidence of episodic Phreatomagnetic eruptions from trachyte evidence, dated to 3.800± 400 years B.C., that originated the Lagoa do Congro maar.[1]
Geography
The Congro system is situated in the central-eastern portion of the island of São Miguel, separated the Água de Pau Massif and crater of the Furnas volcano, and includes scoria cones and lava flows associated with ancient volcanic eruptions.[1] In addition, there are several examples of maars and lava domes.[1]
Although it is the least eruptive of the systems forming the island of São Miguel, it has shown a higher frequency of important seismic activities associated with tectonic and volcano-related pressures.[1]
References
Notes
Sources
- Moore, R.; Rubin, M. (1991), "Radiocarbon dates for lava flows and piroclastic deposits on São Miguel, Azores", Radiocarbon (33:1), pp. 151–164
- Zbyzewsky, G.; Moitinho de Almeida, F.; Veiga Ferreira, O.; Torre de Assunção (1958), Notícia explicativa da Folha "B", da ilha S. Miguel (Açores) da Carta Geológica de Portugal na escala 1:50.000 (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Serviço Geological de Portugal, p. 37