Los Atlixcos volcano
Updated: Aug 19, 2022 08:12 GMT - Refresh
shield volcano 800 m / 2,625 ft
Mexico, 19.81°N / -96.53°W
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
Mexico, 19.81°N / -96.53°W
Current status: normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
Los Atlixcos (Cerro el Abra) volcano is located at the eastern end of the Mexican Volcanic Belt along the Gulf of Mexico, about 80 km NW of the city of Veracruz. It is a young a shield volcano topped by 2 large cinder cones and associated lava fields, both called Cerro los Atlixcos.
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Los Atlixcos volcano eruptions: unknown, less than 10,000 years ago
Lastest nearby earthquakes: No recent earthquakes
Background
The 2 pyroclastic cones of Cerro los Atlixcos lie along an E-W line about 2 km apart and are breached to the east. A broad apron of basaltic lava flows extends primarily to the north and east, reaching as far as the coast. The extent of the lava shield is defined by the Río Santa Ana on the NE and the Río El Tecuán on the south. The youthful morphology of the cones suggests a Holocene age. Other pyroclastic cones of Quaternary age are located to the NW, and a group of cones and silicic lava domes of Tertiary-to-Quaternary age were constructed along the coast to the SE.

See also: Sentinel hub | Landsat 8 | NASA FIRMS