Cenozoic volcanism II: the Canary Islands


Autoria(s): Carracedo, J.C.; Perez-Torrado, Francisco-Jose; Ancochea, Eumenio; Meco, J.; Hernán Reguera, F.; Cubas, Carmen Rosa; Casillas; Ramón; Rodríguez Badiola, Eduardo; Ahijado, Agustina
Data(s)

29/04/2016

29/04/2016

2002

Resumo

<p>[EN] The Canarian archipelago comprises seven main volcanic islands and several islets that form a chain extending for c. 500 km across the eastern Atlantic, with its eastern edge only 100 km from the NW African coast (Fig. 18.1). The islands have had a very long volcanic history, with formations over 20 million years old cropping out in the eastern Canaries. Thus all stages of the volcanic evolution of oceanic islands, including the submarine stage as well as the deep structure of the volcanoes, can be readily observed. Rainfall and vegetation cover are relatively low, with the exception of the island of La Palma, favouring both geological observation and rock preservation. Furthermore, the absence of surface water has promoted groundwater mining by means of up to 3000 km of subhorizontal tunnels (locally known as ‘galerías’). </p>

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10553/16796

262615

<p>10.1144/GOSPP.18</p>

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

Acceso libre

Fonte

<p>Gibbons, Wes; Moreno, Teresa (eds.). Geology Of Spain. London : The Geological Society of London, 2002. ISBN 1-86239-110-6</p>

Palavras-Chave #24 Ciencias de la vida #2416 Paleontología
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/other