Isabel, Isla

Google Earth Placemark
  • Country
  • Subregion Name
  • Volcano Type
  • Last Known Eruption
  • 95 m
  • 21.848°
  • -105.886°
  • Elevation
  • Latitude
  • Longitude

No latest activity reported for #volcano.name#.



 Available Weekly Reports


There are no weekly reports found.

Below is a summary of eruption dates and Volcanic Explosivity Indices (VEI).


Start Date (mm/dd/yyyy)
Stop Date (mm/dd/yyyy)
VEI

The following references are the sources used for data regarding this volcano. References are linked directly to our volcano data file. Discussion of another volcano or eruption (sometimes far from the one that is the subject of the manuscript) may produce a citation that is not at all apparent from the title. Additional discussion of data sources can be found under Volcano Data Criteria.

Aranda-Gomez J J, 1999. . (pers. comm.)

Cabral-Cano E, Armienta-Hernandez M A, Urrutia-Fucugauchi J, 1990. Reconocimiento geologico y paleomagnetico en la Isla Isabel, Narayit, Mexico. {Rev Geofis}, 31: 161-184

Housh T B, Aranda-Gomez J J, Luhr J F, 2010. Isla Isabel (Nayarit, Mexico): Quaternary alkalic basalts with mantle xenoliths erupted in the mouth of the Gulf of California. {J Volc Geotherm Res}, 197: 85-107

Luhr J F, 1999. . (pers. comm.)



Isla Isabel, a complex of tuff cones and associated lava flows, forms a small 1.5-km-long island located in the Pacific Ocean 30 km off the coast of Narayit state, NW of the city of Tepic. Despite its apparent location at the western end of the Mexican Volcanic Belt, Isla Isabel consists of alkaline basaltic rocks and tephra similar to those of other Mexican island volcanoes and in the Northern Mexican Extensional Province. The island is a wildlife sanctuary whose rocks and vegetation are mantled with guano. Spectacular exposures of the interior of the tuff cones forming the island can be found in sea cliffs of the main island and offshore islets. The age of the most recent eruptive activity is not known, but morphology and a negative Argon-Argon age from a young sample suggests activity may have continued into the Holocene. One youthful-looking unvegetated lava flow of unknown age is located on the NW side of the island.