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| ISS021-E-23475 |
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| Lake Ilopango, El Salvador: The Central American country of El
Salvador occupies a land area nearly the same size as the U.S. State
of Massachusetts, and it includes numerous historically active
volcanoes. This detailed astronaut photograph highlights the Ilopango
Caldera that is located approximately 16 kilometers to the east of
the capital city, San Salvador. Calderas are the geologic record of
powerful volcanic eruptions that empty out a volcano’s magma chamber;
following the eruption, the overlying volcanic structure collapses
into the newly formed void, leaving a large crater-like feature (the
caldera). The last caldera-forming eruption at Ilopango occurred during the fifth century AD; it was a powerful event that produced pyroclastic flows that destroyed early Mayan cities in the region. Later volcanic activity included the formation of several lava domes within the lake-filled caldera and near the shoreline. The only historical eruption at Ilopango took place in 1879-80. This activity resulted in the formation of a lava dome in the center of Lake Ilopango. The summit of the dome forms small islets known as Islas Quemadas (visible as small white dots in the larger image). The city of Ilopango borders the lake to the west (image left), while green, vegetated hills ring the rest of the shoreline. White, patchy cumulus clouds are also visible in the image (center and upper left).
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This service is provided by the International Space Station program and the JSC Astromaterials Research & Exploration Science Directorate. Recommended Citation: Image Science and Analysis Laboratory, NASA-Johnson Space Center. "The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth." . |
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