Melimoyu is a stratovolcano in Chile. It is an elongated volcanic complex that contains two nested calderas of and width. An ice cap has developed on the volcano with a couple of outlet glaciers. Melimoyu has not erupted in recent times, but during the Holocene two large eruptions took place and ejected ash at large distances from the volcano.
Geography and geomorphology
Melimoyu is a remote volcano in Chile northwest of the townPuyuhuapi and northeast from the Moraleda Channel inlet. The volcano is about high and long, with an elongated shape. There are four summits, all principally created by phreatomagmatic activity and which conspicuously rise above the surrounding area and give the mountain its name. It is one of the larger volcanoes in the region. It bears an ice-filled summit caldera -- wide as well as another, wide caldera that is drained northeastward through a gap in the caldera rim. The volcano is mostly formed by lava flows and has a volume of about, which is comparatively large. Melimoyu displays a large ice cap which after shrinkage over the preceding few decades covered a surface area of through a retreat rate of about between 1970-2017; said shrinkage also led to the retreat of outlet glaciers and the development of a proglacial lake. There are sixteen or seven glaciers on the mountain, clockwise from north they are named Glaciar Correntoso, Glaciar Melimoyu Este, Glaciar Marchant, Glaciar Melimoyu Sur, Glaciar Melimoyu Oeste, Glaciar Santo Domingo and Glaciar Anihue.
The climate at Melimoyu is cold and oceanic, with cold fronts from Antarctica, westerly winds and synoptic systems from the Pacific Ocean dominating the climate. Summers are short and cold and there is abundant precipitation with no dry season; where orographic enhancement occurs precipitation can reach. Average temperatures are about.
Eruption history
Two large Holocene eruptions have been identified at Melimoyu, called MEL1 and MEL2 and whose deposits are known as the La Junta and Santa Ana tephras respectively. The larger MEL1 eruption occurred between 2,790 – 2,740 years ago and produced a layered basaltic-dacitic tephra consisting ofpumice with lithics and scoria inclusions. The MEL2 eruption took place about 1,680 ± 100 calibrated radiocarbon years ago and consists of pumice of andesitic composition. MEL1 deposits have thicknesses of depending on the layer at distance of the volcano, while MEL2 units rech thicknesses of at the same distance. At Palena Lake east from Melimoyu the MEL1 layer is still thick. A thick tephra deposit at Lago Shaman and Mallín El Embudo in the Río Cisnes valley has been attributed to the MEL2 eruption. Other findings of tephra are MEL2 layers at Laguna Junco and Laguna Las Mellizas. Overall, both eruptions appear to have had a volcanic explosivity index of 5 and produced about and tephra for the MEL1 and MEL2 eruption, respectively. The compositions of the two tephras are different, with the MEL2 magma having formed possibly from leftover MEL1 magma. The MEL1 tephra is of basaltic trachyandesite to basaltic andesite composition and the MEL2 tephra is of trachydacite composition. Other eruptions identified through tephra at Lago Shaman and Mallín El Embudo occurred 4,800 – 4,600 calibrated radiocarbon years ago, while a late glacial maximum eruption over 19,670 years before present produced another thick tephra layer in the Río Cisnes valley. Two additional tephra layers, 8,300 and 19,700 years old, at Río Cisnes may also have originated at Melimoyu. Glacial activity has otherwise removed much of the record of volcanic activity before the post-glacial. A 350 ± 200 CE eruption at Melimoyu deposited ash as far as Antarctica, where it was found in the Siple Dome. This eruption together with volcanic eruptions of Calbuco and Taupo in New Zealand induced noticeable cooling and increased snowfall in Australia. There are no recorded historical eruptions aside from occasional seismic events. The Chaiten eruption in 2008 has highlighted the hazard that volcanoes constitute, and thus a number of volcanoes including Melimoyu are monitored with seismic stations. Local towns such as Puerto Cisnes may experience tephra falls in case of renewed volcanic activity at Melimoyu, while lahars and lava bombs would threaten the area directly surrounding the volcano.