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Apaneca Range

Photo of this volcano
  • Country
  • Volcanic Region
  • Landform | Volc Type
  • Last Known Eruption
  • 13.872°N
  • 89.742°W

  • 2,028 m
    6,654 ft

  • 343010
  • Latitude
  • Longitude

  • Summit
    Elevation

  • Volcano
    Number


Most Recent Bulletin Report: November 1990 (BGVN 15:11) Citation IconCite this Report

October explosion deaths rise to 26; new crater described

The 13 October blast of steam and mud roared continuously (like a geyser) for 10-20 minutes, decreasing in intensity following the initial explosion (reported by a survivor to be around 20 seconds long). No seismic signals were recorded before or during the event by seismometers 4 and 30 km away. A portable seismometer, operated for a few days following the blast, also recorded no signals.

The 30-m-diameter, 15-m-deep crater produced by the blast was partially filled by a continuously boiling muddy lake during a 27 October visit. A sulfurous "rotten egg" smell was noted. Prior to the blast, the site was an area of steaming ground, with two small hot springs (1-2 m across) and 1 mudpot (1 m across) much smaller than the present crater.

The blast was laterally oblique to the N and its effects abruptly ended at a maximum of 130 m. Damage included downed trees and limbs, collapsed walls of buildings, and missing roofs. The massive, non-sorted deposits were clay-rich and composed of light-colored highly altered rock fragments. Deposits were thickest to the N where they ranged from 1 m on the crater rim to 30 cm at 20 m from the rim. The death toll increased to 26 after 13 people died in hospitals.

Information Contacts: C. Dan Miller, USGS.

The Global Volcanism Program has no Weekly Reports available for Apaneca Range.

Bulletin Reports - Index

Reports are organized chronologically and indexed below by Month/Year (Publication Volume:Number), and include a one-line summary. Click on the index link or scroll down to read the reports.

09/1990 (BGVN 15:09) Phreatic blast at hot springs; 14 people dead

11/1990 (BGVN 15:11) October explosion deaths rise to 26; new crater described




Information is preliminary and subject to change. All times are local (unless otherwise noted)


September 1990 (BGVN 15:09) Citation IconCite this Report

Phreatic blast at hot springs; 14 people dead

At approximately 0130 on 13 October a small phreatic blast occurred in the village of El Barro, in the SW portion of the Ahuachapán Geothermal Field. Agua Shuca (an area 2-3 m in diameter of fumaroles, mud pots, and altered ground at 13.90°N, 89.82°W) erupted violently, producing a "blast of wind, stones, and boiling water" that destroyed several small dwellings and affected an area with a 100-m radius. Fourteen people were reported killed and 21 injured [but see 15:11]. The explosion was reportedly directed and lasted about 20 seconds according to survivors. By 15 October, a quiet pond (below the boiling point), 10 m in diameter [but see 15:11], had formed in the explosion crater and the surrounding area was covered with mud.

The Ahuachapán geothermal field has been an extensively developed source of energy for more than 15 years. It is located in a highly fractured zone at the N base of Laguna Verde, an eroded stratovolcano with Pleistocene and possibly Holocene activity (figure 1). Agua Shuca is situated on a fault, 2 km S of the Ahuachapán power plant (figure 2), and is outside of the geothermal field drawdown area. A well drilled 100 m N of Agua Shuca in 1971 (AH-9), was not developed due to the low permeability of the rocks at the site. A large landslide in 1981, 1/2 km NE of Agua Shuca and along the same fault, occurred shortly after a test of the reservoir at the maximum rate of power extraction, stopped because of a dramatic pressure decline.

Figure (see Caption) Figure 1. Portion of a geologic/structural map of Ahuachapán Geothermal Field and vicinity, prepared by the Comisión Executiva Hidroeléctrica del Río Lempa. Courtesy of Dina López.
Figure (see Caption) Figure 2. Detailed structural map of the Ahuachapán Geothermal Field, prepared by the Comisión Executiva Hidroeléctrica del Río Lempa. Heavy lines mark faults, large "steaming" circles indicate hot springs, and small circles with crosses show individual geothermal wells. Courtesy of Dina López.

Information Contacts: Rodolfo Caceres, División Geotermía, Comisión Executiva Hidroeléctrica del Río Lempa, Santa Tecla, La Libertad, El Salvador; Marshall Reed, US Dept of Energy; Marcelo Lippmann, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Univ of California; Grant Heiken, Los Alamos National Laboratory; Dina López, Louisiana State Univ.


November 1990 (BGVN 15:11) Citation IconCite this Report

October explosion deaths rise to 26; new crater described

The 13 October blast of steam and mud roared continuously (like a geyser) for 10-20 minutes, decreasing in intensity following the initial explosion (reported by a survivor to be around 20 seconds long). No seismic signals were recorded before or during the event by seismometers 4 and 30 km away. A portable seismometer, operated for a few days following the blast, also recorded no signals.

The 30-m-diameter, 15-m-deep crater produced by the blast was partially filled by a continuously boiling muddy lake during a 27 October visit. A sulfurous "rotten egg" smell was noted. Prior to the blast, the site was an area of steaming ground, with two small hot springs (1-2 m across) and 1 mudpot (1 m across) much smaller than the present crater.

The blast was laterally oblique to the N and its effects abruptly ended at a maximum of 130 m. Damage included downed trees and limbs, collapsed walls of buildings, and missing roofs. The massive, non-sorted deposits were clay-rich and composed of light-colored highly altered rock fragments. Deposits were thickest to the N where they ranged from 1 m on the crater rim to 30 cm at 20 m from the rim. The death toll increased to 26 after 13 people died in hospitals.

Information Contacts: C. Dan Miller, USGS.

This compilation of synonyms and subsidiary features may not be comprehensive. Features are organized into four major categories: Cones, Craters, Domes, and Thermal Features. Synonyms of features appear indented below the primary name. In some cases additional feature type, elevation, or location details are provided.

Eruptive History

There is data available for 0 confirmed Holocene eruptive periods.

[ 1990 Oct 13 ] Discredited Eruption

Deformation History

There is no Deformation History data available for Apaneca Range.

Emission History

There is no Emissions History data available for Apaneca Range.

Photo Gallery

The Ahuachapán geothermal area on the NW flank of Laguna Verde has been used for power generation since 1975. It is one of the most recent manifestations of activity in a group of Pleistocene and Holocene volcanoes comprising the Cuyanausul Range. The Cerro El Aguila and Cerro Los Naranjos volcanoes at the eastern end are Holocene in age. A 1990 steam explosion from the Ahuachapán thermal area resulted in fatalities.

Photo by Dick Stoiber, 1962 (Dartmouth College).
A plume rises from well CH-D during its opening in 1996. The Ahuachapán geothermal field was the first major field to be developed in El Salvador and has been operating since 1975. The geothermal field is located mostly in permeable, highly fractured Pliocene-Pleistocene volcanic rocks of the San Salvador formation that are capped by a series of young pyroclastic rocks and lava flows. A younger system of NW-trending faults localizes hydrothermal features within a series of step faults dropping to the north at the margin of the Central Salvadoran Graben.

Photo by Carlos Pullinger, 1996 (Servicio Nacional de Estudios Territoriales, El Salvador).
Two volcanoes rise above the town of Juayua in western El Salvador. The peak to the left is Cerro los Naranjos, one of the youngest peaks of the Apaneca Range volcanic complex. The broader peak to the right is Santa Ana. Santa Ana has produced recent eruptions from both summit and flank vents.

Photo by Carlos Pullinger, 1996 (Servicio Nacional de Estudios Territoriales, El Salvador).
The northern side of the broad Apaneca Range is seen here from El Rodeo. From left to right are Cerro Cuyanausul, Laguna Verde (the center peak), Las Ninfas, and the Cerro La Cumbre complex. The E-W-trending chain of overlapping Pleistocene and Holocene volcanoes of the Apaneca Range forms a major topographic barrier in western El Salvador.

Photo by Carlos Pullinger, 1996 (Servicio Nacional de Estudios Territoriales, El Salvador).
The cooling towers of the Ahuachapán-3 power plant are part of a geothermal field that has been producing for more than a quarter century. The liquid-dominated geothermal reservoir has a base temperature of about 240 degrees centigrade. It is located on the northern flank of the Apaneca (Cuyanausul) Range along the southern margin of the Salvadoran central graben. Consequently it is lower to the north and NW, where it has been affected by graben subsidence.

Photo courtesy of Comisión Ejecutiva Hidroeléctricia del Río Lempa (CEL).
Steam lines going to the power plant snake across the surface of the Ahuachapán-Chipilapa geothermal field in western El Salvador. The field is located on the northern flank of the Sierra de Apaneca range 15 km from the Guatemala border. The Ahuachapán-Chipilapa field was the first to be developed in El Salvador and began production in 1975.

Photo courtesy of Comisión Ejecutiva Hidroeléctricia del Río Lempa (CEL).
This aerial view shows the Ahuachapán-3 geothermal power plant. The Ahuachapán-Chipilapa geothermal field has an installed capacity of 95 MW and a potential of 95-150 MW. It covers an area of 200 km2 in the counties of Santa Ana, Ahuachapán, and Sonsonate. The field was the first developed in El Salvador, and the first plants came on line in 1975. During the 1980s the field was over-exploited and generated more than 40% of the country's electricity. After the reservoir pressure dropped rapidly, generation was stabilized at 48 MW.

Photo courtesy of Comisión Ejecutiva Hidroeléctricia del Río Lempa (CEL).
This view from the Apaneca Range shows the CH-A well and drill rig of the Ahuachapán geothermal field in the foreground. The peak on the left horizon across the lowlands of El Salvador's interior valley is Volcán Chingo, along the El Salvador/Guatemala border. The flatter peak to the far right is Volcán Suchitán in Guatemala.

Photo by Comisión Ejecutiva Hidroeléctricia del Río Lempa (CEL), 1992.
Ausoles de la Labor fumaroles and hot pools form one of the largest geothermal areas in the Ahuachapán geothermal field. The area is located near the SW base of the Cerro San Lazaro lava dome, about 5 km N of Laguna Verde volcano. The Ahuachapán geothermal field contains fumaroles, mud volcanoes, or hot springs, throughout a roughly 80 km2 area on the northern flank of the Apaneca Range.

Photo by Giuseppina Kysar, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution).
Ausoles de la Labor geothermal field on the flank of Laguna Verde volcano is within the Ahuachapán geothermal field. The fumaroles typically attain temperatures of about 100°C. In addition to those at La Labor, fumaroles are also located at El Playón, Agua Shuca, El Sauce, and higher up at Laguna Verde and Ausoles de Cuyanausul, and numerous hot springs are found in the Ahuachapán geothermal area.

Photo by Giuseppina Kysar, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution).
Laguna Verde is a 500-m-wide lake that partially fills the 1-km-wide summit crater of Cerro Laguna Verde in the Apaneca Range. Laguna Verde is a Pleistocene-age edifice within the Concepción de Ataco caldera. Flank craters on Laguna Verde volcano are among the youngest volcanic centers of the Apaneca Range.

Photo by Giuseppina Kysar, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution).
Bubbling mudpools at Ausoles de la Labor fumaroles on the northern flank of Laguna Verde volcano eject reddish oxidized mud onto the surrounding area. This is one of several prominent geothermal areas in the Apaneca Range. Hot springs are also found north of the Apaneca Range, particularly along the Agua Caliente and Escalante rivers.

Photo by Rick Wunderman, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution).
The Laguna Las Ninfas-Laguna Verde volcanic complex is seen here from the NW with steam plumes of the Ahuachapán geothermal field in the midground. The 5-km-wide Concepción de Ataco caldera formed during the late Pleistocene following the eruption of about 70 km3 of pyroclastic flows and airfall tephra. Flat-topped Laguna Verde at the center of the photo and Las Ninfas at the right are post-caldera cones. Cerro Cuyanausul (left) was constructed prior to caldera formation and lies to the east of the caldera.

Photo by Pat Dobson, 1999 (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory).
Steam rises above a hot pool at Agua Shuca, one of many thermal areas of the Ahuachapán geothermal field. A sudden hydrothermal explosion at Agua Shuca in October 1990 ejected steam and debris within a 200-m-radius, and 26 people living adjacent to the thermal area were killed. The Agua Shuca thermal area ESE of Laguna Verde volcano had historically been one of the most frequently visited areas at Ahuachapán. A previous explosion apparently took place in 1868.

Photo by Pat Dobson, 1999 (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory).
Steam plumes rise from the AH-16 production well at the Ahuachapán geothermal field. The Ahuachapán field, producing since 1975, is a high-temperature initially water-dominated system located on the flank of Laguna Verde volcano about 2 km NW of the summit.

Photo by Pat Dobson, 1999 (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory).
The Apaneca Range is seen here from the SE. This elongated group of Pleistocene and Holocene edifices lies in western El Salvador, between the Santa Ana complex and the Guatemala border. The 5-km-wide Pleistocene Concepción de Ataco caldera lies beyond the flat ridge to the left; to its right are Cerro Cachio, Cerro de las Rana, Cerro el Aguila, and conical Cerro los Naranjos. The Apaneca Range is the site of the major geothermal field of Ahuachapán.

Photo by Lee Siebert, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution).
The summit of Izalco provides a view of the adjacent Apaneca Range volcanic complex to the west. The flat-topped edifice to the far-left is Cerro de Apaneca. The city of Juayua can be seen in the center of the photo. Above it is the small El Cerrito peak, and to its right is Cerro la Cumbre and the Cerro las Ninfas-Laguna Verde complex.

Photo by Lee Siebert, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution).
The broad E-W-trending Apaneca Range is seen here from the south with flat-topped Cerro de Apaneca on the left. The Laguna Las Ninfas -Laguna Verde complex is in the center, and to its right are Cerro Cuyanausul, Cerro los Ranas, Cerro el Aguila, and Cerro los Naranjos. The Concepción de Ataco caldera lies beyond the center horizon, behind post-caldera cones. The photo is taken from the top of a hummock on the surface of the massive Acajutla debris avalanche deposit that originated from Santa Ana volcano, which is out of view to the right.

Photo by Lee Siebert, 1999 (Smithsonian Institution).
Cerro de Apaneca is to the left above the city of Juayua. To its right is Cerro la Cumbre and the Cerro las Ninfas-Laguna Verde complex. Construction of the latter post-dated major Pleistocene explosive eruptions that resulted in formation of the Pleistocene Concepción de Ataco caldera.

Photo by Lee Siebert, 2002 (Smithsonian Institution).
Cerro los Naranjos volcano is at the SE end of the Sierra de Apaneca. Cerro el Aguila ("Eagle Peak") lies on the left horizon to the NW of Los Naranjos.

Photo by Lee Siebert, 2002 (Smithsonian Institution).
The escarpment across the middle of the photo with vertical rows of coffee plantation trees across the scarp in is the NW wall of a large caldera formed by edifice collapse of Santa Ana volcano during the late Pleistocene. About 5 km of the scarp is exposed; the remainder is buried beneath ejecta and lava flows from modern Santa Ana volcano. Cerro los Naranjos volcano rises beyond the scarp, and other peaks of the Apaneca range form the horizon on either side.

Photo by Lee Siebert, 2002 (Smithsonian Institution).
Coffee beans dry in the sun at a finca near the town of San José la Majada in the SE part of the Apaneca range. Coffee is the primary crop in this portion of El Salvador; fertile volcanic soil and abundant rainfall provide excellent habitat for coffee trees across the flanks of the volcanoes of the Apaneca range and Santa Ana massif. The Cerro las Ninfas-Laguna Verde complex forms the ridge on the horizon.

Photo by Lee Siebert, 2002 (Smithsonian Institution).
The escarpment cutting diagonally downward across the middle of the photo in front of conical Cerro los Naranjos volcano is the NW wall of a large late-Pleistocene caldera formed by edifice collapse of Santa Ana volcano. The exposed portion of the collapse scarp is up to about 200 m high along a roughly 5 km segment of the arcuate avalanche caldera. Pyroclastic ejecta and lava flows from modern Santa Ana volcano have filled in much of the scarp in the foreground and have buried it completely on the northern and eastern sides.

Photo by Paul Kimberly, 2002 (Smithsonian Institution).
Lake-filled Coatepeque caldera is prominent in this International Space Station image with north to the lower left. A post-caldera lava dome forms an island at the SW side of the lake. The nested summit craters of Santa Ana volcano are visible below and to the right of Coatepeque, and the unvegetated cone of Izalco volcano is to the right of Santa Ana. Small stratovolcanoes of the Sierra de Apaneca form the forested ridge at the bottom right. The light-colored area at the left-center is the city of Santa Ana, the second largest in El Salvador.

NASA International Space Station image ISS004-E-9398, 2002 (http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/).
The E-W trending Apaneca Range is across the middle of this November 2019 Planet Labs satellite image monthly mosaic (N is at the top; this image is approximately 25 km across). The range includes the roughly E-W ridge along the upper half of this image, and the two cones below it – the linear Cerro de Apaneca and Cuyotepe just E of it. The crater on the western end of the ridge is Laguna las Ninfas, and the small lake NE is Cerro Laguna Verde. West of those is the Concepción de Ataco caldera.

Satellite image courtesy of Planet Labs Inc., 2019 (https://www.planet.com/).
GVP Map Holdings

Maps are not currently available due to technical issues.

The maps shown below have been scanned from the GVP map archives and include the volcano on this page. Clicking on the small images will load the full 300 dpi map. Very small-scale maps (such as world maps) are not included.

Smithsonian Sample Collections Database

There are no samples for Apaneca Range in the Smithsonian's NMNH Department of Mineral Sciences Rock and Ore collection.

External Sites