VOLCANOES
Costa
Rica lies at the heart of one of the most active volcanic regions
on earth. The beauty of the Costa Rican landscape has been enhanced
by volcanic cones--part of the Pacific Rim of Fire--that march
the length of Central America. Costa Rica has seven of the isthmus's
42 active volcanoes, plus 60 dormant or extinct volcanoes. Some
have the look classically associated with volcanoes--a graceful
symmetrical cone rising to a single crater. Others are sprawling,
much-weathered mountains whose once-noble summits collapsed into
huge depressions, called calderas. Still others have smooth shield-shaped
outlines with rounded tops pockmarked by tiny craters, such as
on Cocos Island.
Poás
Visitors seeking to peer into
the bowels of a rumbling volcano can easily do so. The reward
is a scene of awful grandeur, like the fires of Milton's hell.
Atop Poás's crater rim, for example, you can gape down
into the great well-like vent where pools of molten lava bubble
menacingly--with diabolical, gut-wrenching fumes of chlorine and
sulfur, and explosive cracks, like the sound of distant artillery,
for good effect.
Several national parks have
been created around active volcanoes, with accommodations, viewing
facilities, and lectures and guided walks to assist visitors in
understanding the processes at work. A descriptive map charting
the volcanoes is published by the Vulcanological and Seismological
Observatory of Costa Rica at the National University in Heredia,
which monitors volcanic activity throughout the nation (Libreria
Lehmann and Libreria Trejos, in San José, may sell the
map).
Irazú
In
1963, Irazú (elev. 3,412 meters) broke a 20-year silence
to begin disgorging great clouds of smoke and ash. The eruptions
triggered a bizarre storm which showered San José in five
inches of muddy ash and snuffed out the 1964 coffee crop, enriching
the Meseta Central for years to come. The binge lasted for two
years, then abruptly ceased. Poás (elev. 2,692 meters)
has been particularly virulent during the past 30 years. In the
1950s, the restless four-mile-wide giant awoke with a roar after
a 60-year snooze, and it has been huffing and puffing ever since.
Eruptions then kicked up a new cone several hundred feet high.
Two of Poás's craters now slumber under blankets of vegetation
(one even cradles a lake), but the third crater belches and bubbles
persistently. In 1989, a spate of intense eruptions and gas emissions
forced Poás Volcano National Park to close (local residents
were even evacuated), and the volcano is constantly monitored
for impending eruptions.
Arenal
A more spectacular light-and-sound
show is given by Arenal (elev. 1,624 meters). Following a four-century-long
Rip van Winkle-like dormancy, this 4,000-year-young juvenile began
spouting in 1968, when it laid a four-square-mile area to waste.
Arenal's activity, sometimes minor and sometimes not, continues
unabated. Though currently more placid, Miravalles, Turrialba,
and Rincón de la Vieja, among Costa Rica's coterie of coquettish
volcanoes, also occasionally fling fiery fountains of lava and
breccia into the air.
The type of magma that fuels
most Central American volcanoes is thick, viscous, and so filled
with gases that the erupting magma often blasts violently into
the air. If it erupts in great quantity, it may leave a void within
the volcano's interior, into which the top of the mountain crumbles
to form a caldera (from the Portuguese word for caldron). Irazú
is a classic example. Irazú's top fell in eons ago. Since
then, however, small eruptions have built up three new volcanic
cones--"like a set of nesting cups," says one writer--within
the ancient caldera.
Much
of the information on our site as it relates to Costa Rica is:
Courtesy
of Christopher P. Baker and Avalon Travel Publishing.
© 2004 Christopher P. Baker. All Rights Reserved.
Spanish Abroad, Inc. highly
recommends Christopher P. Baker's book: Moon
Handbooks Costa Rica. Click on the image to visit
his website where you can purchase this book or find out more
about the author.
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