Acatenango is a stratovolcano in Guatemala
, close to the city of Antigua
. The
volcano has two peaks,
Pico Mayor (Highest Peak) and
Yepocapa (3,880 m) which is also known as Tres Hermanas
(Three Sisters).
Acatenango is joined with Volcán de
Fuego
and collectively the volcano complex is known as La
Horqueta.
The Fuego-Acatenango
massif comprises a
string of five or more
volcanic vents
along a north-south trend that is perpendicular to that of the
Central American arc in Guatemala.
From north
to south known centers of volcanism are Ancient Acatenango,
Yepocapa, Pico Mayor de Acatenango, Meseta, and Fuego
. Volcanism along the trend stretches back
more than 200,000 years. Although many of the centers have
been active contemporaneously, there is a general sequence of
younger volcanism, from north to south along the trend.
This
massive volcano complex towers more than 3,500 metres above
the Pacific
coastal
plain to the south and 2,000 metres above the Guatemalan Highlands to the
north. The volcano complex comprises remnants of multiple
eruptive centers, which periodically have collapsed to form huge
debris avalanches. The largest of these avalanches extended more
than 50 kilometres from its source and covered more than 300
square kilometres. The volcano has potential to produce huge
debris avalanches that could
inundate large areas of the Pacific coastal plain. In areas around
the volcanoes and downslope toward the coastal plain, more than
100,000 people are potentially at risk from these and other
flowage phenomena.
The only known historical
eruptions of
Acatenango volcano occurred in the 20th century, between 1924 and
1927 from just north of the summit peak (Pico Mayor) and again in
December 1972 from the saddle between Yepocapa and Pico Mayor.
These
phreatic explosions generated
ballistic
volcanic bombs that fell
near the summit craters and fine
volcanic
ash that fell up to 25 km away. In prehistoric time,
Acatenango has erupted explosively to form widespread fall
deposits, hot
pyroclastic flows and
lava flows. There have been numerous eruptions
during the past 80,000 years from vents along the massif. The
most recent explosive eruptions of Acatenango occurred
1,900 years ago (Pico Mayor), 2,300 years ago (Pico
Mayor) and about 5,000 years ago (Yepocapa). If such eruptions
were to recur, many people and costly infrastructure would be at
risk.

Major Volcanoes of Guatemala
See also
Sources