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Report on Santa Maria (Guatemala) — 21 October-27 October 2015


Santa Maria

Smithsonian Institution / US Geological Survey
Weekly Volcanic Activity Report, 21 October-27 October 2015
Managing Editor: Sally Sennert.

Please cite this report as:

Global Volcanism Program, 2015. Report on Santa Maria (Guatemala) (Sennert, S, ed.). Weekly Volcanic Activity Report, 21 October-27 October 2015. Smithsonian Institution and US Geological Survey.

Weekly Report (21 October-27 October 2015)

Santa Maria

Guatemala

14.757°N, 91.552°W; summit elev. 3745 m

All times are local (unless otherwise noted)


INSIVUMEH reported that on 21 October heavy rainfall in the area triggered steaming hot lahars which descended Santa María’s Nima I and San Isidro drainages. Both lahars carried blocks as large as 1.5 m in diameter; the Nimá I deposit was 18 m wide and 1.5 m deep. Explosions during 21-22 October generated ash plumes that rose 700 m above the crater and drifted SW, causing ashfall in El Rosario Palajunoj finca. Ash plumes from explosions drifted S and SE during 25-26 October; ashfall was reported in areas downwind.

Geological Summary. Symmetrical, forest-covered Santa María volcano is part of a chain of large stratovolcanoes that rise above the Pacific coastal plain of Guatemala. The sharp-topped, conical profile is cut on the SW flank by a 1.5-km-wide crater. The oval-shaped crater extends from just below the summit to the lower flank, and was formed during a catastrophic eruption in 1902. The renowned Plinian eruption of 1902 that devastated much of SW Guatemala followed a long repose period after construction of the large basaltic-andesite stratovolcano. The massive dacitic Santiaguito lava-dome complex has been growing at the base of the 1902 crater since 1922. Compound dome growth at Santiaguito has occurred episodically from four vents, with activity progressing E towards the most recent, Caliente. Dome growth has been accompanied by almost continuous minor explosions, with periodic lava extrusion, larger explosions, pyroclastic flows, and lahars.

Source: Instituto Nacional de Sismologia, Vulcanologia, Meteorologia, e Hidrologia (INSIVUMEH)