Data from the Global Volcanism Program of the Smithsonian Institution
Details for: Huequi
The roughly 20-km-wide Huequi Peninsula extends about 40 km into the Gulf of Ancud in southern Chile. Volcán Huequi is a small, glacier-free volcano located just to the right of the center of this NASA International Space Station image (with north to the upper left). A parasitic cone is located on the west side of the 1318-m-high basaltic andesite volcano, which has an 800-m-wide crater. Explosive eruptions were recorded during the 19th and 20th centuries, initially in 1890 and most recently in about 1920. NASA International Space Station image ISS008-E-12502, 2004 (http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/).
Volcano Number: 358030
Volcano Name: Huequi
Country: Chile
Volcano Type: Lava dome(s)
Last Eruption: 1920 CE
Elevation: 1318m
Tectonic Setting: Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Pop. within 10km: 7
Pop. within 30km: 1076
Pop. within 100km: 107960
Latitude: -42.377
Longitude: -72.578



Eruption Data from the Global Volcanism Program of the Smithsonian Institution
Emissions Data from the Global Volcanism Program of the Smithsonian Institution
Sorry. No emissions data found for this volcano.


Data from the Earthchem Library
Sorry. No data exist for this volcano in the EarthChem Library.
Data from the Earthchem Portal
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Data from the SESAR Database
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Data from the MaGa Database
Sorry. No data exist for this volcano in the MaGa database.


Data from UNAVCO
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Data from USIEI
Sorry. This volcano is not covered by any USIEI projects


Data from IRIS FDSNWS
Sorry. No IRIS data found for this volcano.