Volcán Sacabaya (also known as Tambo Quemado or Cerro Quemado) is a low pyroclastic shield near the Rio Lauca on the Bolivian Altiplano 26 km from the border with Chile.
It is not known when it last erupted, but its very fresh morphology suggests a young (Holocene) age and there is fumarolic activity.
pyroclastic shield 4215 m / 13,829 feet
Northern Chile, Bolivia and Argentina, South America, -18.62°S / -68.75°W
Current status:
normal or dormant (1 out of 5)
|
ReportsSacabaya volcano booksSacabaya volcano eruptions:
probably within the past 10,000 years
Typical eruption style:effusive and strombolian
Last earthquakes nearbyLatest satellite images

Sacabaya volcano news & activity updates:
Thu, 11 Sep 2014, 18:39
A pilot reported seeing an ash plume at flight level 170 (17,000 ft, 5 km) altitude today, but there are no other indications that an eruption took place and it could be a false eruption report as weather clouds can sometime easily be mistaken by ash plumes.