Miravalles Volcano

Volcano in Costa Rica
Miravalles Volcano is located in Costa Rica
Miravalles Volcano
Miravalles Volcano
Costa Rica
Parent rangeCordillera de GuanacasteGeologyAge of rock1.5 MyrMountain typeStratovolcanoLast eruptionSeptember 1946[1]

The Miravalles Volcano is an andesitic stratovolcano in Costa Rica. The caldera was formed during several major explosive eruptions that produced voluminous dacitic-rhyolitic pyroclastic flows between about 1.5 and 0.6 million years ago. The only reported historical eruptive activity was a small steam explosion on the south-western flank in 1946. High heat flow remains, and Miravalles is the site of the largest developed geothermal field in Costa Rica.[1]

The Miravalles Volcano reaches an elevation of 2,023 metres (6,637 ft) and is the highest mountain in the Guanacaste Mountains. The heat from the volcano also helps power a geothermal energy plant at Las Hornillas, which is run by the Institute of Electricity.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Miravalles". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2010-03-11.
  2. ^ Stater, Adam. "The Miravalles Volcano".
  • v
  • t
  • e
Volcanoes of Costa Rica
Cordillera de Guanacaste
  • flagCosta Rica portal
Cordillera de TilaránCordillera Central
  • v
  • t
  • e
Mountains of Costa Rica
  • Agua Gata
  • Anunciación
  • Arenal
  • Azufrado
  • Barva
  • Cerro Barrera
  • Bijagua
  • Cerro Bola
  • Braum
  • Cerro Cacao
  • Cacho Negro
  • Caldera de Miravalles
  • Cañas Dulces
  • Cerro Cedral
  • Cerro Buenos Aires
  • Cerro de la Muerte
  • Cerro de Las Vueltas
  • Cerros de Escazú
  • Chachaguita
  • Chato
  • Chirripó
  • Chompipe
  • Coco Mountain
  • Cocorí Mountain
  • Concepción Mountain
  • Congo Mountain
  • Coronel Mountain
  • Coto Pelón
  • Cotón
  • Crestones (Costa Rica)
  • Dikar
  • Doussaints
  • Duan Mountains
  • Durika
  • Echandi
  • El Hacha
  • El Jaboncillo
  • Espiritu Santo Mountain
  • Fortuna Mountain
  • Gorgona Mountain
  • Iglesias
  • Irazú
  • Juan Murillo Mountain
  • Kámuk
  • Laguna Bosque Alegre
  • Laguna Poco Sol
  • Laguna Rio IV
  • Loma Barrantes
  • Loma Morera
  • Lomas
  • Los Chiles
  • Mano de Tigre
  • Miravalles
  • Monte de la Cruz
  • Montezuma Mountain
  • Morazán Mountain
  • Negro
  • Olla de Carne
  • Orosí
  • Palmira Mountain
  • Pasquí
  • Pata de Gallo
  • Pelado y Delicias
  • Pelón
  • Perdidos
  • Pico Alto
  • Pico Blanco
  • Piedra de Fuego
  • Platanar
  • Poás
  • Porvenir
  • Quemados
  • Quezada Mountain
  • Rabo de Mico
  • Rincón (Costa Rica)
  • Rincón de la Vieja
  • San Miguel
  • San Roque Mountain
  • San Vicente Mountain
  • Santa Maria Mountain
  • Siete
  • Sinsal
  • Tenorio
  • Tilarán
  • Tortuguero Mountain
  • Truncado
  • Turrialba
  • Urán
  • Valle Hermoso Mountain
  • Ventisqueros
  • Viejo
  • Von Francius
  • Von Seebach
  • Vuelta Kopper
  • Weyl Mountain
  • flagCosta Rica portal
  • 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.


Stub icon

This Costa Rican location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e