Nevado San Francisco
Mountain in Argentina
Nevado San Francisco , or Cerro San Francisco (Spanish pronunciation: [neˈβaðo/ˈsero saɱ fɾanˈsisko] ), is a stratovolcano on the border between Argentina and Chile ,[ 3] located just southeast of San Francisco Pass . It is considered extinct and is one of the several 6,000 m (19,700 ft) peaks in the area, of which the chief is the Ojos del Salado . It is on the border of 2 provinces: Argentinean province of Catamarca ; Chilean province of Copiapo .[ 4] [ 5] [ 6]
The volcano is part of the Central Volcanic Zone of the Andes[ 7] and reaches an elevation of 6,016 metres (19,738 ft).[ 8] [ 4] [ a] [ b] It is composed from andesite with the exception of basaltic cones and lava flows on the eastern side. These cones are part of the Peinado lineament and a sample was dated 200,000 years ago by argon chronology.[ 15] : 74–75 They are noteworthy for their olivine phenocrysts .[ 7] One lava flow less than one million years old reaches a length of 11 kilometres (6.8 mi).[ 16] The western slopes contain dacitic lava domes .[ 17] On the summit lie two circle-shaped constructs, of Inca or Formative period ages.[ 15] San Francisco was first climbed by Walther Penck (Germany) on 16 December 1913.[ 18]
Notes
^ Other data from digital elevation models : SRTM yields 6,027 metres (19,774 ft),[ 9] ASTER 6,019 metres (19,747 ft),[ 10] SRTM filled with ASTER 6,027 metres (19,774 ft),[ 10] ALOS 6,019 metres (19,747 ft),[ 11] TanDEM-X 6,069 metres (19,911 ft)[ 12] and a handheld GPS survey by Maximo Kausch in October 2012 6,045 metres (19,833 ft).[ 13]
^ The height of the nearest key col is 4,911 metres (16,112 ft),[ 14] leading to a topographic prominence of 1,124 metres (3,688 ft) with a topographical dominance of 18.62%. Its parent peak is Ojos del Salado and the Topographic isolation is 34.8 kilometres (21.6 mi).[ 13]
See also
References
^ "San Francisco" . Andes Specialists . Retrieved 2020-04-12 .
^ Walter Penck (1912–1914). Diarios de investigaciones y viajes a la Cordillera de los Andes .
^ Biggar, John (2020). The Andes a guide for climbers (5th ed.). Castle Douglas, Scotland. ISBN 978-0-9536087-7-5 . OCLC 1260820889 . {{cite book }}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link )
^ a b "San Francisco" . Andes Specialists . Retrieved 12 April 2020 .
^ "Capas SIG | Instituto Geográfico Nacional" . www.ign.gob.ar . Retrieved 2020-04-30 .
^ rbenavente. "Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional | SIIT | Mapas vectoriales" . bcn.cl . Retrieved 2020-04-30 .
^ a b Kay, Suzanne Mahlburg; Mpodozis, Constantino; Gardeweg, Moyra (1 January 2014). "Magma sources and tectonic setting of Central Andean andesites (25.5–28°S) related to crustal thickening, forearc subduction erosion and delamination" . Geological Society, London, Special Publications . 385 (1): 310. Bibcode :2014GSLSP.385..303K . doi :10.1144/SP385.11 . ISSN 0305-8719 . S2CID 129489335 .
^ Difrol Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
^ USGS, EROS Archive. "USGS EROS Archive - Digital Elevation - SRTM Coverage Maps" . Retrieved 12 April 2020 .
^ a b "ASTER GDEM Project" . ssl.jspacesystems.or.jp . Retrieved 14 April 2020 .
^ "ALOS GDEM Project" . Retrieved 14 April 2020 .
^ TanDEM-X, TerraSAR-X. "Copernicus Space Component Data Access" . Retrieved 12 April 2020 .
^ a b "Andean Mountains - All above 5000m" . Andes Specialists . Retrieved 12 April 2020 .
^ "Andean Mountains - All above 5000m" . Andes Specialists . Retrieved 12 April 2020 .
^ a b Nevado de Incahuasi: The Archaeological Anatomy of a Sacred Mountain in the Andes . 2008. ISBN 978-1-109-06242-7 .
^ "Comunicación | Conicet" . www.conicet.gov.ar (in European Spanish). Retrieved 7 July 2017 .
^ Baker, P. E.; Gonzalez-Ferran, O.; Rex, D. C. (1 February 1987). "Geology and geochemistry of the Ojos del Salado volcanic region, Chile" . Journal of the Geological Society . 144 (1): 89. Bibcode :1987JGSoc.144...85B . doi :10.1144/gsjgs.144.1.0085 . ISSN 0016-7649 . S2CID 130046594 .
^ Penck, Walter (1912–1914). Diarios de investigaciones y viajes a la Cordillera de los Andes .
External links
Northern Volcanic Zone (6° N – 3° S) Central Volcanic Zone (14°–27° S) Southern Volcanic Zone (33°–46° S) Austral Volcanic Zone (49°–55° S) Note: volcanoes are ordered by latitude from north to south