Tres Vírgenes
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Tres Vírgenes is a complex of
volcano A volcano is a rupture in the Crust (geology), crust of a Planet#Planetary-mass objects, planetary-mass object, such as Earth, that allows hot lava, volcanic ash, and volcanic gas, gases to escape from a magma chamber below the surface. On Ear ...
es located in the
Mulegé Municipality Mulegé is a city in Mulegé Municipality, Baja California Sur, situated on the Gulf of California. Located on the Gulf of California, the population was 3,821 according to the Mexican census of 2010. History Indigenous peoples had lived in ...
in the state of Baja California Sur, on the Baja California Peninsula in northwestern
Mexico Mexico (Spanish: México), officially the United Mexican States, is a country in the southern portion of North America. It is bordered to the north by the United States; to the south and west by the Pacific Ocean; to the southeast by Guatema ...
. This Volcano is part of a volcanic ridge that extends from Baja California towards the Guaymas Basin. It is composed of three volcanoes, aligned northeast–southwest, with El Viejo, the oldest, to the northeast, El Azufre in the middle, and the youngest, El Vírgen, to the southwest. El Vírgen, being by far the most conspicuous of the three, is commonly known as "Las Tres Vírgenes".


Geological Background

Volcán Las Tres Vírgenes is part of a cluster that includes the central vent structure of El Azufre and El Viejo. The off-shore volcanic ridges extend from Tres Vírgenes–Aguajito–La Reforma towards sea-floor spreading centers in the Guayamas basin. It is located within the Gulf of California rift zone. It is a part of a volcanic ridge that extends from the eastern coast of Baja California towards active sea floor spreading in the Guaymas basin.


Geologic Structure

The ground floor of Las Tres Vírgenes volcano holds the oldest rock in the region which is a granitic rock of the Cretaceous era. Above this intrusive rock layer is a volcanic cover from the late Cenozoic era that includes andesite from the Santa Lucía Range, and Esperanza basalt. The Santa Rosalia Formation is beneath this volcanic cover which consists of shallow-water marine deposits identified by fossiliferous sandstone. Above all these layers, the region consists of a variety of pyroclastic particles from different stages of its most recent volcanic activity. These rocks produced at Las Tres Vírgenes volcanic region have characteristics like those of the calc–alkaline magma series. The volcanic complex has also emitted andesitic to dacitic magmas from 300 to 22ka. This complex of three stratovolcanoes began as mostly dacitic lava flows and domes which resulted in the formation of El Viejo (300 Ka). Volcanic activity later shifted southwest forming El Azufre (173 Ka). Finally, at about 112 Ka, volcanism migrated southwest yet again beginning the creation of El Virgen. Up until 22Ka, El Virgen initially had the largest cone of the three volcanoes at 31.2 km3. The next largest was El Viejo at 4.2 km3 and lastly, El Azufre at 3.8 km3.


El Viejo

El Viejo is the oldest from the volcanoes that make up the Tres Virgenes. It is made up of three lava domes which are in oldest to youngest : the lower viejo dacite, puerta dacite, and the upper viejo dacite. The Lower Viejo dacite dome is overlain by the puerta dacite dome and has a 0.1 km thick lobe-like lava. The dome has light gray lava with mottled structure due to the abundance of enclaves which are dark gray aphanitic that come in different shapes. The puerta dacite is well exposed compared to the other two domes. The dome is covered by a blocky lava surface with a crumble breccia at the base. It is 0.19 km thick and the lava contains sub-rounded 10 cm enclaves. The last dome being the youngest is the Upper Viejo dacite and this dome has a blocky surface as well and it contains sub-rounded enclaves. The average thickness of the dome is 0.26 km.


El Azufre

This volcano has block and ash flow which pyroclastic fans that are dissected by radial drainage and at the fan toe is limited by volcaniclastic deposits. The average thickness is 0.1 km and it covers an area of 7.5 km. Then it also consists of a dacite central dome which is located atop the Azufre Volcano. It has a height of 0.3 km and an exposed area of 0.78 km. The lava varies from dark-gray to pinkish-gray and the dome shows sub-rounded lava blocks with dark gray enclaves.


El Virgen

El Virgen is by far the most conspicuous of the three. It is made up of at least 6 scoria cones all spread out around the Virgen volcano. Three of these cones are on the southern flank of El Azufre and they have elongated and coalesced shapes and are crudely aligned in N-S direction. They cover an area of 0.46 km and averages a height of 0.06 km. These scoria cones consist of massive grain supported poorly sorted fallout beds. It also consists of 6 andesite lava being the Cueva de Gel, Lower Pintos, Upper Pintos, Lower Virgen, Pintos dacite, and Upper Virgen andesite lava. Adding to the andesites has one neck which serves as a feeding vent of the volcano and is almost entirely covered by younger deposits of the volcano. The Virgen dacite lava cone is the only cone and represents the main structure of the La Virgen stratocone. As well as there being many andesite lavas there are 4 lava domes. The Mezquital dacite lava dome is made up of two and they are located on the southern apron of the Virgen volcano. El Virgen is by far the most complex of the three volcanoes as you can see by everything that it consists of such as the lavas, cones, and domes.


Eruption history

The last eruption of the volcanoes in the complex was of El Vírgen, but the date is disputed. A map drawn by the Croatian Jesuit missionary
Ferdinand Konščak Fernando Consag, known in his native Croatian as Ferdinand Konščak (December 2, 1703 – September 10, 1759), was a Croatian Jesuit missionary, explorer and cartographer, who spent most of his life in Mexico, in Baja California. Education Con ...
contains a reference to an eruption in 1746.Ives, Ronald, ''Dating of the 1746 Eruption of Tres Virgenes Volcano, Baja California Del Sur, Mexico,'' Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 73, pp. 647–648, May 1962. Radiometric datings, however, do not agree with this. A charcoal fragment found in a volcanic deposit was dated at approximately 6515 years before present.Capra et al., ''Holocene plinian eruption of La Virgen Volcano, Baja California, Mexico,'' Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, Issue 80 pp. 239–266, 1998. A basaltic lava flow, which must be younger than the actual eruption, was dated at approximately 24 thousand years B.P.,Hausback and Abrams, ''Plinian eruption of La Virgen Tephra, Volcán Las Tres Virgenes, Baja California Sur, Mexico'', American Geophysical Union, Issue 77, pp. 813–814, 1996. which agrees with a dating of
tephra Tephra is fragmental material produced by a volcanic eruption regardless of composition, fragment size, or emplacement mechanism. Volcanologists also refer to airborne fragments as pyroclasts. Once clasts have fallen to the ground, they re ...
fragments from El Vírgen that yielded an age of approximately 36 thousand years B.P. for the eruption.Schmitt et al., ''Eruption and magma crystallization ages of Las Tres Vírgenes (Baja California) constrained by combined 230Th/238U and (U–Th)/He dating of zircon,'' Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, Issue 158, pp. 281–295, 2006.


See also

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Volcanoes of east-central Baja California The volcanoes of east-central Baja California are located on the Baja California Peninsula near the Gulf of California, in the state of Baja California Sur, in Mexico. Geography Baja California is a peninsula in Mexico, bordering the Pacific O ...
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List of volcanoes in Mexico Types of volcanoes There are multiple types of volcanoes in Mexico. Volcanoes can be of different types such as cinder cone volcanoes, composite volcanoes, shield volcanoes, and lava domes. Each of these variations of volcanos forms in its ...
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List of Ultras of Mexico The following sortable table comprises the 26 ultra-prominent summits of México. Each of these peaks has at least of topographic prominence.This article defines a significant summit as a summit with at least of topographic prominence, and ...
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List of mountain peaks of Mexico This article comprises three sortable tables of major mountain peaksThis article defines a significant summit as a summit with at least of topographic prominence, and a major summit as a summit with at least on topographic prominence. All sum ...


External links

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Tres Virgenes Volcanic Complex

Hike to the top of Tres Vírgenes (Part 1)

Hike to the top of Tres Vírgenes (Part 2)

"Volcán Las Tres Vírgenes" on Peakbagger


References

{{reflist, 1 Stratovolcanoes of Mexico Mountains of Baja California Sur Mulegé Municipality Pleistocene stratovolcanoes Volcanoes of Baja California Sur