Tilocálar
Tilocálar is a group of volcanoes south of the Salar de Atacama, in Chile. It developed during the Pleistocene and consists of a small lava dome, two vents with numerous thick lava flows that reach lengths of several kilometres, and an explosion crater that was mistaken for an impact crater in the past. There are similar volcanoes nearby.
Geography and geomorphology
Tilocálar is located south of the Salar de Atacama, within the Central Volcanic Zone of the Andes at an elevation of approximately. It is a group of small volcanoes:- The southern vent is the larger. It produced six or four lava flows with a total volume of about. Pyroclastic deposits cover an area of, forming a roughly circular area where the lava flows were emplaced. It has three volcanic craters aligned on a graben and the lava flows probably emanated from a lava lake.
- The northern vent of Tilocálar produced only one long flow, which covers an area of about and consists of three separate geologic units.
- A small lava dome is situated southwest of Tilocálar north and is called El Maní; it resembles a pile of rocks.
- An explosion crater lies south of Tilocálar Sur and has also been described as a maar. This crater has a diameter of and a depth of, and bears traces of having been filled with water in the past. It was discovered in 1976 during field work and originally was interpreted to be an impact crater, but does not have the properties of one.
Geology
The volcanoes developed on ignimbrites of Pliocene age, which are alternatively identified as the Talabre or the Tucucaro ignimbrite; the latter is million years old. The region is subject to compressional tectonic forces, and a Plio-Pleistocene north-south trending fault system played a role in the development of the volcano. Magnetotelluric analysis has identified electrically conductive structures underneath Tujle and Tilocálar, which may either by hydrothermally altered rocks or partial melt left over from past magmatic processes.Between Bolivia, Chile and Argentina, an area of volcanoes exceeding constitutes the Altiplano-Puna volcanic complex. These volcanoes were active during the last 26 million years in distinct pulses, most recently one million years ago at Apacheta-Aguilucho volcanic complex, El Tatio and Purico. The pulses are characterized by the emission of ignimbrites and the formation of calderas. These volcanic units are silicic, but more mafic volcanic units were also emplaced in the region in the form of monogenetic volcanoes such as Tilocálar.
Composition
Lava flows have an andesitic to dacitic and the lava dome a dacitic to rhyolitic composition, and define a potassium-rich calc-alkaline chemical pattern with clinopyroxene, iron-titanium oxides, olivine, orthopyroxene, plagioclase and pyroxene phenocrysts. There are noticeable differences in the composition of the northern and southern Tilocálar lavas. A delaminated lower crust may have contributed to the formation of the Tilocálar magmas. Andesitic magmas in the region may have formed when basaltic magmas became trapped in fault systems and underwent crystal fractionation processes before reaching the surface and generating the monogenetic volcanoes.Eruptive history
The volcanoes were active during the Quaternary, Pleistocene-Holocene or in the last 900,000 years. Dating has yielded ages of less than one million years, and argon–argon dating on Tilocálar Sur has produced ages of and years. There are no known historical eruptions and has not been assigned a hazard score; potential impacts of renewed activity on populations are considered to be minimal.North Tilocálar formed during a single eruption, while Tilocálar Sur was constructed during multiple eruptions. Presumably an initial explosive eruption emplaced the pyroclastics, which were then in part overrun by the lava flows. The event had a volcanic explosivity index of 3–4. The explosion crater was probably formed through a steam or gas explosion when the conduit of Tilocálar Sur was breached and interacted with a regional confined groundwater body.