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Middle–to–late Holocene explosive eruptions of Lonquimay volcano (Southern Andes of Chile): stratigraphy, tephra dispersal, and pre-eruptive conditions

Middle–to–late Holocene explosive eruptions of Lonquimay volcano (Southern Andes of Chile): stratigraphy, tephra dispersal, and pre-eruptive conditions
Middle–to–late Holocene explosive eruptions of Lonquimay volcano (Southern Andes of Chile): stratigraphy, tephra dispersal, and pre-eruptive conditions

The Lonquimay-Tolguaca Volcanic Complex (LTVC), located in Chile's Andean Southern Volcanic Zone (40°S), experienced its last eruption in 1988–90, profoundly affecting neighbouring rural communities. Yet, more than twenty explosive eruptions have been recognised and described at Lonquimay volcano from its Holocene tephra records. Knowing its eruptive past is one of the main concerns of the residents of Malalcahuello, 11 km E-SE from the LTVC. In this contribution, we aim to decipher the behaviour of Lonquimay, focusing on its most recent (i.e., Middle-to-Late Holocene, <5.5 ka) explosive history to address community-based questions with renewed scientific knowledge. We studied proximal-to-medial (i.e., 2–15 km) tephra sequences east-southeast from the LTVC. Seventeen tephra units were described. These are mainly formed by rhythmic alternations of both grey to white pumice beds, and black to brown scoria beds. Pyroclast textures consisting of scoria, dense juvenile fragments and pumices display compositions ranging from basalts to dacites. The study of tephra deposits suggests Strombolian to Sub-Plinian eruptive styles, whereas isopach-based volume estimates on the order of 10 7 m 3 from four individual deposits support a Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) of 3. This type of events has a 27–61 % probability of occurrence within the next 100 years. The studied tephra deposits were fed by mafic (basaltic and basaltic andesitic, 1050–1100 °C) and silicic (andesites and dacites, 890–940 °C) magma batches stored between ∼2 to ∼7.5 kbar. Magma evolution was mostly controlled by fractional crystallisation and occasional mixing events. Assessing tephra fall deposits simultaneously at multiple scales offers clues on the eruptive scenarios, magma processes and sources, as well as potential hazards of their parent volcanic systems. Along with contributing to scientific knowledge, these elements can enhance risk reduction strategies by integrating community questions about active volcanism into hazard research.

Eruption style, Geochemistry, Lonquimay volcano, Southern Andes, Tephrostratigraphy
0377-0273
Romero, Jorge E.
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Cáceres, Francisco
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Rojas, Luis
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Guevara, Alicia
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Polanco, Edmundo
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Vergara-Pinto, Francisca
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Michailidou, Eleni
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Naranjo, José A.
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Fabbrizio, Alessandro
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Weber, Gregor
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Bustillos, Jorge
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Castruccio, Ángelo
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Poblete, Matías
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Rodríguez, Inés
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Romero, Jorge E.
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Cáceres, Francisco
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Rojas, Luis
e761b5ca-2022-41a1-9c03-541400943005
Guevara, Alicia
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Polanco, Edmundo
44199bb1-8c66-499a-96ee-47778569c39a
Vergara-Pinto, Francisca
5e468d54-541a-485b-a490-f059e05805da
Michailidou, Eleni
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Naranjo, José A.
949541f2-6b5b-4197-94f3-f464a040e26a
Fabbrizio, Alessandro
3c7f8096-6fa9-494c-913a-78bfd5275b05
Weber, Gregor
22817986-5332-4ef5-a66b-bebac236a3bd
Bustillos, Jorge
d65d9d7e-56ef-496d-8563-b394d68ccd2b
Castruccio, Ángelo
d893a786-35ba-4639-802d-105ba4abe1ae
Poblete, Matías
fe53bb74-1baf-47f2-b52a-7b78d13fb24f
Rodríguez, Inés
de13edf2-23a8-4ac8-b8b2-05176f593ee2

Romero, Jorge E., Cáceres, Francisco, Rojas, Luis, Guevara, Alicia, Polanco, Edmundo, Vergara-Pinto, Francisca, Michailidou, Eleni, Naranjo, José A., Fabbrizio, Alessandro, Weber, Gregor, Bustillos, Jorge, Castruccio, Ángelo, Poblete, Matías and Rodríguez, Inés (2025) Middle–to–late Holocene explosive eruptions of Lonquimay volcano (Southern Andes of Chile): stratigraphy, tephra dispersal, and pre-eruptive conditions. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 468, [108457]. (doi:10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2025.108457).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The Lonquimay-Tolguaca Volcanic Complex (LTVC), located in Chile's Andean Southern Volcanic Zone (40°S), experienced its last eruption in 1988–90, profoundly affecting neighbouring rural communities. Yet, more than twenty explosive eruptions have been recognised and described at Lonquimay volcano from its Holocene tephra records. Knowing its eruptive past is one of the main concerns of the residents of Malalcahuello, 11 km E-SE from the LTVC. In this contribution, we aim to decipher the behaviour of Lonquimay, focusing on its most recent (i.e., Middle-to-Late Holocene, <5.5 ka) explosive history to address community-based questions with renewed scientific knowledge. We studied proximal-to-medial (i.e., 2–15 km) tephra sequences east-southeast from the LTVC. Seventeen tephra units were described. These are mainly formed by rhythmic alternations of both grey to white pumice beds, and black to brown scoria beds. Pyroclast textures consisting of scoria, dense juvenile fragments and pumices display compositions ranging from basalts to dacites. The study of tephra deposits suggests Strombolian to Sub-Plinian eruptive styles, whereas isopach-based volume estimates on the order of 10 7 m 3 from four individual deposits support a Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) of 3. This type of events has a 27–61 % probability of occurrence within the next 100 years. The studied tephra deposits were fed by mafic (basaltic and basaltic andesitic, 1050–1100 °C) and silicic (andesites and dacites, 890–940 °C) magma batches stored between ∼2 to ∼7.5 kbar. Magma evolution was mostly controlled by fractional crystallisation and occasional mixing events. Assessing tephra fall deposits simultaneously at multiple scales offers clues on the eruptive scenarios, magma processes and sources, as well as potential hazards of their parent volcanic systems. Along with contributing to scientific knowledge, these elements can enhance risk reduction strategies by integrating community questions about active volcanism into hazard research.

Text
VOLGEO-D-25-00078_R2 - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 28 September 2026.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 September 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 September 2025
Published date: 30 September 2025
Keywords: Eruption style, Geochemistry, Lonquimay volcano, Southern Andes, Tephrostratigraphy

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507168
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507168
ISSN: 0377-0273
PURE UUID: 9d3d651f-fe1a-4b8b-acce-46c5c4abe5a1
ORCID for Gregor Weber: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8827-1443

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Nov 2025 17:35
Last modified: 29 Nov 2025 03:11

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Contributors

Author: Jorge E. Romero
Author: Francisco Cáceres
Author: Luis Rojas
Author: Alicia Guevara
Author: Edmundo Polanco
Author: Francisca Vergara-Pinto
Author: Eleni Michailidou
Author: José A. Naranjo
Author: Alessandro Fabbrizio
Author: Gregor Weber ORCID iD
Author: Jorge Bustillos
Author: Ángelo Castruccio
Author: Matías Poblete
Author: Inés Rodríguez

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