Volcán Tacaná

Stratovolcano in northern Guatemala
Volcán Tacaná is located in Central America
Volcán Tacaná
Volcán Tacaná
San Marcos, Guatemala and Chiapas, Mexico
Parent rangeSierra Madre de ChiapasGeologyMountain typeStratovolcanoVolcanic arcCentral America Volcanic ArcLast eruptionMay 1986
Volcán Tacaná is located in Mexico
Volcán Tacaná
class=notpageimage|
Location on the border between Mexico and Guatemala.

The volcano Tacaná is the second highest peak in Central America at 4,060 metres (13,320 ft), located in the Sierra Madre de Chiapas of northern Guatemala and southern Mexico.[1] It is also known in Mexico as Volcán Tacina.[2]

Geography

The volcano is located within the Tacaná municipality of the San Marcos Department in Guatemala; and within the Cacahoatán and Unión Juárez Municipalities of Chiapas state in Mexico.

Its last known eruption was registered in 1986 — a small phreatic eruption in May — but it is still considered as dangerous to more than 250,000 people residing in the area.

Map of the Central America volcanic arc, with captions showing the location of several volcanoes. Tacaná is the first large volcano, at the top of the row of captioned volcanoes on this image.

Tacaná is the first of hundreds of volcanoes in a 1,500 km (930 mi) km row, arranged NW to SE, parallel to the Pacific Ocean coast of Central America, known as the Central America Volcanic Arc, formed by an active subduction zone along the western boundary of the Caribbean Plate.

The agricultural valley at its NNE foothills is covered with thick deposits of lahars. From its headwaters in Guatemala, the valley drains through Mexico to the Pacific Ocean. Consequently, mudflows from future eruptions could be dangerous to those in their path in both countries.[3]

Volcanology

Tacaná is a stratovolcano (composite volcano) that is surrounded by deeply dissected plutonic and metamorphic terrain. It has a 9 km (5.6 mi) wide caldera, with its elongated summit dominated by several lava domes and three large calderas breached to the south.[1]

Mild phreatic eruptions of Tacaná took place in historical times. Its most powerful known explosive activity, which included pyroclastic flows, occurred at about 70 AD (± 100 years). That large explosion has resulted in Tacaná being classified with a volcanic explosivity index of 4 by the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History's Global Volcanism Program.[4]

Forest on the slope of Volcán Tacaná.

Biosphere Reserve

Tacaná is part of the Central American Core volcanic chain, which contains fragile ecosystems and rich biodiversity of cultural, scientific, economic and biological relevance, particularly in the high mountain ecosystem. Its landscapes and volcanic edifice present geophysical features of great scientific and aesthetic value.

Consequently, it has been included in UNESCO's World Network of Biosphere Reserves of the Man and Biosphere Program (MAB).[5]

Visitor access

The summit of Tacaná can be reached in about 10 hours. There are two approaches to the mountain. One is from Finca Navidad, south of the volcano, passing through Tojquián Grande, on the Guatemalan side, and moving parallel to the border with Mexico.

The second route is from the Mexican side, from El Carmen, Talismán bridge, Cacahoatán, and Unión Juárez by vehicle, and from there on foot.[6] This route crosses into Guatemala and has been described as one of the most interesting hikes in Central America, leading up winding paths through lush rainforests, subsistence farming villages, up ancient magma flows, and rock-filled temperate forests before reaching the top of the lowest caldera. From there the final stretch to the summit provides panoramic views high above the clouds as the tree-line gradually diminishes with altitude. Several major volcanos within the Central American Volcanic Arch including Tajumulco are visible from the summit.

See also

  • mapNorth America portal
  • iconCentral America portal
  • flagGuatemala portal
  • flagMexico portal
  • iconMountains portal
  • iconVolcanoes portal

References

  1. ^ a b c "Tacaná". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2021-06-27.
  2. ^ "Volcán Tacina: Mexico". Retrieved 2011-05-06.
  3. ^ "Tacana volcano, Mexico and Guatemala". Volcano Photos. Retrieved 2011-05-07.
  4. ^ "Large Volcano Explocivity Index". Retrieved 2011-05-07.
  5. ^ "Biosphere Reserve Information, Mexico, Volcán Tacaná". UNESCO. Retrieved 2011-05-08.
  6. ^ "Volcán Tacaná". www.deguate.com. Retrieved 2011-05-08.

External links

Volcán Tacaná at Wikipedia's sister projects
  • Definitions from Wiktionary
  • Media from Commons
  • News from Wikinews
  • Quotations from Wikiquote
  • Texts from Wikisource
  • Textbooks from Wikibooks
  • Resources from Wikiversity
  • "Volcán Tacaná, Guatemala/Mexico"
  • Media related to Volcán Tacaná at Wikimedia Commons
  • v
  • t
  • e
  1. Denali
  2. Mount Logan
  3. Pico de Orizaba
  4. Mount Saint Elias
  5. Volcán Popocatépetl
  6. Mount Foraker
  7. Mount Lucania
  8. Volcán Iztaccíhuatl
  9. King Peak
  10. Mount Bona
  11. Mount Steele
  12. Mount Blackburn
  13. Mount Sanford
  14. Mount Wood
  15. Mount Vancouver
  16. Mount Slaggard
  17. Nevado de Toluca
  18. Mount Fairweather
  19. Sierra Negra
  20. Mount Hubbard
  21. Mount Bear
  22. Mount Walsh
  23. Mount Hunter
  24. Volcán La Malinche
  25. Mount Whitney
  26. Mount Alverstone
  27. University Peak
  28. Mount Elbert
  29. Mount Massive
  30. Mount Harvard
  31. Mount Rainier
  32. Mount Williamson
  33. McArthur Peak
  34. Blanca Peak
  35. La Plata Peak
  36. Uncompahgre Peak
  37. Crestone Peak
  38. Mount Lincoln
  39. Castle Peak
  40. Grays Peak
  41. Mount Antero
  42. Mount Blue Sky
  43. Longs Peak
  44. Mount Wilson
  45. White Mountain Peak
  46. North Palisade
  47. Mount Princeton
  48. Mount Yale
  49. Mount Shasta
  50. Maroon Peak
  51. Mount Wrangell
  52. Mount Sneffels
  53. Capitol Peak
  54. Pikes Peak
  55. Windom Peak/Mount Eolus
  56. Mount Augusta
  57. Handies Peak
  58. Culebra Peak
  59. Cofre de Perote
  60. San Luis Peak
  61. Mount of the Holy Cross
  62. Nevado de Colima
  63. Grizzly Peak
  64. Mount Humphreys
  65. Mount Keith
  66. Mount Strickland
  67. Mount Ouray
  68. Vermilion Peak
  69. Avalanche Peak
  70. Atna Peaks
  71. Volcán Tajumulco
  72. Regal Mountain
  73. Mount Darwin
  74. Mount Hayes
  75. Mount Silverheels
  76. Rio Grande Pyramid
  77. Gannett Peak
  78. Mount Kaweah
  79. Grand Teton
  80. Mount Cook
  81. Mount Morgan
  82. Mount Gabb
  83. Bald Mountain
  84. Mount Oso
  85. Mount Jackson
  86. Mount Tom
  87. Bard Peak
  88. Cerro Tláloc
  89. West Spanish Peak
  90. Mount Powell
  91. Hagues Peak
  92. Mount Dubois
  93. Tower Mountain
  94. Treasure Mountain
  95. Kings Peak
  96. North Arapaho Peak
  97. Mount Pinchot
  98. Mount Natazhat
  99. Mount Jarvis
  100. Parry Peak
  101. Bill Williams Peak
  102. Sultan Mountain
  103. Mount Herard
  104. Volcán Tacaná
  105. West Buffalo Peak
  106. Mount Craig
  107. Tressider Peak
  108. Summit Peak
  109. Middle Peak/Dolores Peak
  110. Antora Peak
  111. Henry Mountain
  112. Hesperus Mountain
  113. Mount Silverthrone
  114. Jacque Peak
  115. Bennett Peak
  116. Wind River Peak
  117. Mount Waddington
  118. Conejos Peak
  119. Mount Marcus Baker
  120. Cloud Peak
  121. Wheeler Peak
  122. Francs Peak
  123. Twilight Peak
  124. South River Peak
  125. Mount Ritter
  126. Red Slate Mountain
  • v
  • t
  • e
  1. Pico de Orizaba
  2. Popocatépetl
  3. Iztaccíhuatl
  4. Nevado de Toluca
  5. Sierra Negra
  6. Malinche
  7. Nevado de Colima
  8. Cofre de Perote
  9. Mount Tlaloc
  10. Volcán Tacaná
  11. Ajusco
  12. Volcán Tancítaro
  13. Volcán de Colima
  14. Cerro San Rafael
  15. Cerro Potosí
  16. Cerro el Nacimiento
  17. Cerro Teotepec
  18. Picacho San Onofre
  19. Cerro El Jabalín
  20. Peñón del Rosario
  21. Cerro Zempoaltépetl
  22. Cerro El Zamorano
  23. Cerro la Muralla
  24. Cerro Gordo
  25. Cerro Mohinora
  26. El Pinal
  27. Cerro El Refugio
  28. Cerro Grande
  29. El Centinela
  30. Picacho del Diablo
  31. Sierra la Madera
  32. Sierra Fría
  • v
  • t
  • e
Guatemala
El Salvador
  • Chinameca
  • Chingo
  • Conchagua
  • Izalco
  • Santa Ana
  • San Miguel
  • San Salvador
  • San Vicente
  • Usulután
Nicaragua
Costa Rica
Panama
Note: volcanoes are ordered from north-west to south-east.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Chiapas State of Chiapas
Topics
Regions
Municipalities
Protected areas
Authority control databases: Geographic Edit this at Wikidata
  • Global Volcanism Program