4.2 Article

Conductive structures around Las Canadas caldera, Tenerife (Canary Islands, Spain): A structural control

Journal

GEOLOGICA ACTA
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 67-82

Publisher

UNIV BARCELONA
DOI: 10.1344/105.000001516

Keywords

Magnetotelluric method; Caldera; Hydrothermal alteration; Lateral collapse; Tenerife

Categories

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) [200020-111758]

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External eastern areas of the Las Canadas caldera (LCC) of Tenerife (Canary Islands, Spain) have been investigated using the audiomagnetotelluric (AMT) method with the aim to characterize the physical rock properties at shallow depth and the thickness of a first resistive layer. Using the results of 50 AMT tensors carried out in the period range of 0.001 s to 0.3 s, this study provides six unpublished AMT profiles distributed in the upper Orotava valley and data from the Pedro Gil caldera (Dorsal Ridge). Showing obvious I-D behaviour, soundings have been processed through I-D modeling and gathered to form profiles. Underlying a resistive cover (150-2000 Omega m), a conductive layer at shallow depth (18-140 Omega m, 250-1100 m b.g.l.) which is characterized by a wavy-like structure, often parallel to the topography, appears in all profiles. This paper points out the ubiquitous existence in Tenerife of such a conductive layer, which is the consequence of two different processes: a) according to geological data, the enhanced conductivity of the flanks is interpreted as a plastic breccia within a clayish matrix generated during huge lateral collapse; and b) along main tectonic structures and inside calderas, this layer is formed by hydrothermal alteration processes. In both areas, the conductive layer is thought to be related to major structural volcanic events (flank or caldera collapse) and can be seen as a temporal marker of the island evolution. Moreover, its slope suggests possible headwall locations of the giant landslides that affected the flanks of Tenerife.

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