Título
Geology of the late Pliocene - Pleistocene Acoculco caldera complex, eastern Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (México)
11627/533311627/5333
Autor
Avellán López, Denis Ramón
Macías, José Luis
Layer, Paul W
Cisneros Maximo, Guillermo
Sánchez Nuñez, Juan Manuel
Gómez Vasconcelos, Martha Gabriela
Pola Villaseñor, Antonio
Sosa Ceballos, Giovanni
García Tenorio, Felipe
Reyes Agustín, Gabriela
Osorio Ocampo, Lady Susana
García Sánchez, Laura
Mendiola, Irma Fabiola
Marti, Joan
López Loera, Héctor
Benowitz, Jeff A
Resumen
"We present a new 1:80,000-scale geologic map of the Acoculco caldera (Ac) located between the states of Puebla and Hidalgo in eastern Mexico. The map, encompassing an area of 856 km(2), is grounded on an ArcMap data set and is supported by nine new Ar-40/Ar-39 dates. The caldera lies upon Cretaceous limestones and Miocene to Pliocene volcanic rocks (13-3 Ma). The caldera consists of 31 lithostatrigraphic units formed between 2.7 and 0.06 Ma that include a wide variety of volcanic landforms (cinder cones, lava domes). The caldera has a semi-circular shape (18-16 km) bounded by the Atotonilco scarp to the north, the NW-SE Manzanito fault to the west, and scattered vents to the east and southern parts. The distribution of the Acoculco ignimbrite, the lithic breccia, and lacustrine sediments define the caldera ring fault. Late Pleistocene activity and pervasive hydrothermal alteration suggest a high geothermal potential in the area."
Fecha de publicación
2019Tipo de publicación
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2018.1531075Área de conocimiento
GEOGRAFÍAColecciones
Editor
Taylor & Francis LTDPalabras clave
GeologyVolcanic stratigraphy
Acoculco caldera complex
Puebla