Cotopaxi


Cotopaxi

North side of Cotopaxi
Elevation: 5,897 m (19,347 ft)
Location: Ecuador
Range: Andes
Coordinates: 0°40′S, 78°26′W
Type: Stratovolcano
Age of rock:
Last eruption: 1904
First ascent: 1872- 11-28 by Wilhelm Reiss and Ángel Escobar
Easiest route: ice climb

Cotopaxi is a volcano in Ecuador, at 5,897 meters the second highest in the country (the highest one being Chimborazo at 6,310 meters), and one of the highest active volcanoes in the world. It is technincally referred to as a stratovolcano. Cotopaxi is situated about 50 km south of Quito. Cotopaxi has a height of more than 3,000 metres when measured from its base, which has a width about 23 km.

It is known to be the highest active volcano in the world.

There have been more than 50 eruptions of Cotopaxi since 1738. Numerous valleys formed by powerful lahars (mudflows) surround the volcano. This poses a high risk to the local population, their settlements and fields. The city Latacunga has been completely destroyed at least twice in its history. The most violent historical eruptions happened in 1744, 1768, and 1877. Pyroclastic flows descended all sides of the volcano in 1877, and lahars traveled more than 100 km into the Pacific Ocean and western Amazon basin. There was a major eruption in 1903 through 1904, and some minor activity in 1942.

The volcano is the subject of 1855 and 1862 paintings by Frederic Edwin Church.

Cotopaxi is also a province of Ecuador.

Cotopaxi as seen from the Corazón
Cotopaxi as seen from the Corazón