Incahuasi lies on the border between
Argentina and
Chile, close to
Paso San Francisco. A major road crosses the border there.
Regional Incahuasi is part of the
Central Volcanic Zone of the
Andes, together with about 110 other
Quaternary volcanoes, and lies in the southern sector of this zone; other volcanic zones in the Andes are the
Northern Volcanic Zone, the
Southern Volcanic Zone, and the
Austral Volcanic Zone. The history of volcanic activity of most of these volcanoes is poorly understood owing to the lack of dating; only a few historical eruptions have been recorded, such as an eruption at
Ojos del Salado in 1993. Incahuasi is located northeast of
Ojos del Salado, the highest volcano in the world. Both volcanoes are found at the southern end of the Central Volcanic Zone. Together with
El Fraile,
Cerro El Muerto,
Nevado Tres Cruces, and
El Solo, they form a volcanic chain. The area is dominated by volcanoes that were active after 1.5 million years ago. Also located close to Incahuasi are
Falso Azufre and
Nevado San Francisco, as well as the
Miocene Cerro Morocho and Cerro Ojo de Las Lozas volcanoes. It has been suggested that a perpendicular chain of volcanoes including Ojos del Salado may be the consequence of the
Juan Fernández Ridge subducting in the
Peru–Chile Trench. Geological evidence suggests that volcanism in the area dates back to the
Oligocene and
Miocene, when the main
volcanic arc was located west in the
Maricunga Belt. Between 9 and 6 million years ago, volcanic activity in the Maricunga Belt decreased and eventually ceased. Simultaneously, the
back-arc experienced increased volcanic activity. Beginning 8.3 million years ago, there was a change in tectonic regime from an east-west compression to a north-south stretching, which led to a change in the alignments of the volcanoes.
Local Incahuasi is formed by a
caldera wide. Two coalesced
stratovolcanoes formed within the caldera and have a diameter of . A
lava dome is located on the eastern flank. The volcano has a volume of about and covers a surface area of about . With a height of , Incahuasi is the 12th-highest mountain in
South America and one of the world's highest volcanoes. Incahuasi has two
craters, a summit crater and an arcuate crater on the eastern slope that contains a lava dome. The summit crater has dimensions of and is embedded within a summit plateau. Subsidiary vents conversely are associated with
fissure vents. The edifice appears to consist of two overlapping volcanoes. The western and southwestern slopes of Incahuasi are dotted with lava domes, which are more subdued than on other volcanoes in the region.
Lava flows less than wide and long extend down the volcano. They reach the Las Coladas
salar east of Incahuasi. Two
coulees extend north and east of the main crater. northeast of Incahuasi, four
pyroclastic cones can be found. They have covered with lava but they are probably an independent volcanic system, similar to other regional
mafic volcanoes. On Incahuasi's eastern flank lies a major lava dome and a field of lava flows. Incahuasi rises over a surface with elevations of . The volcano is surrounded by a field of small volcanoes that is known as the Incahuasi field; it contains 19 small volcanoes with a total rock volume of , which were active during the last 1 million years. File:Incahuasi and el fraile plus laguna verde chile.jpg|Incahuasi is the volcano at the left and El Fraile immediately right. The green lake is
Laguna Verde File:Volcán Incahuasi edit.jpg|Incahuasi from Las Grutas. The eastern lava domes and the northeastern
monogenetic volcanoes are clearly visible.
Composition Like many Andean volcanoes, Incahuasi has erupted
andesite containing
hornblende and
pyroxene, but also
trachyandesite and
trachydacite. Lava flows on the main stratovolcano are
dacitic. The four cones northeast of the principal volcano have erupted
basaltic andesite. Likewise,
parasitic cones have erupted magnesium-rich basaltic andesite. Minerals contained in these rocks include
clinopyroxene and
olivine. The occurrence of such basic magmas in a volcanic setting dominated by dacites appears to be a consequence of local tectonics, which involve the extension of the crust compared to the compressional regime farther west. Originating in the
mantle, the magmas quickly ascended in
faults and were contaminated by
crustal material. The mantle itself had been modified before by crustal material added by
delamination of the lower crust and
subduction erosion. ==Climate==