Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46252
Title: Eruptive and structural history of Teide Volcano and rift zones of Tenerife, Canary Islands
Authors: Carracedo, J. C. 
Rodríguez-Badiola, Eduardo
Guillou, H.
Paterne, M.
Scaillet, S.
Pérez Torrado, F. J. 
Paris, R.
Fra-Paleo, U.
Hansen Machín,Alex Roberto 
UNESCO Clasification: 250621 Vulcanología
Keywords: Teide (Volcán)
Canary Islands
Atlantic Ocean Islands
Igneous rocks
Issue Date: 2007
Publisher: 0016-7606
Journal: Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 
Abstract: The Teide and Pico Viejo stratocones and the Northwest and Northeast Rifts are products of the latest eruptive phase of the island of Tenerife, initiated with the lateral collapse of its northern flank that formed the Las Cañadas Caldera and the Icod–La Guancha Valley ca. 200 ka. The eruptive and structural evolution of this volcanic complex has been reconstructed after detailed geological mapping and radioisotopic dating of the significant eruptive events. A set of 54 new 14C and K/Ar ages provides precise age control of the recent eruptive history of Tenerife, particularly Teide Volcano, the third-highest volcanic feature on Earth (3718 m above sea level, >7 km high), and unique in terms of its intraplate setting. The development of the Teide–Pico Viejo Volcanoes may be related to the activity of the Northwest and Northeast Rifts. Volcanic and intrusive activity along both rift zones may have played an important role in activating the gravitational landslide and in the subsequent growth, nested within the collapse embayment, of an increasingly higher central volcano with progressively differentiated magmas. The coeval growth of the central volcano with sustained activity along the rifts led to a clear bimodal distribution in composition of eruptive products, with the basaltic eruptions in the distal part of the rifts and phonolitic and more explosive eruptions in the central area, where the differentiated stratocones developed. Current volcanic hazard in Tenerife is considered to be moderate, because eruptive frequency is low, explosivity is modest, and the eruptive activity of the Teide stratocone seems to have declined over the past 30 k.y., with only one eruption in this period (1150 yr B.P.).
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46252
ISSN: 0016-7606
DOI: 10.1130/B26087.1
Source: Bulletin of the Geological Society of America [ISSN 0016-7606], v. 119, p. 1027-1051
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