Local The Pali-Aike volcanic field covers a surface area of , and extends over from northwest to southeast. It is formed by a plateau of
lava flows that is up to thick (in its northwestern reach), with an average relief of . This plateau is formed by tables containing depressions and lakes, and whose margins are steep-dipping slopes that accumulate blocks at their feet. It includes remnants of individual volcanic centres, and some
volcanic necks situated in the westcentral part of the field may be the formerly underground components of now-eroded volcanic edifices. Among these volcanic necks are the Cuadrado, Domeyko, Gay and Philippi hills, which conspicuously stick out of the surrounding plains. The volcanic rocks were emplaced atop
Cenozoic- to
Tertiary-age
sediments, which were smoothened by glacial action. The sediments are often unstable and prone to
mass wasting and
landslides. There are 467 volcanic vents in the field.
Monogenetic volcanoes are emplaced on the lava plateau at elevations of above sea level and include
maars,
tuff rings and
scoria cones. These various centres rise between above the surrounding terrain. Nested craters, breached craters and fissure vents are common among the various vents, as are lava flows, but there has been little research on the scoria cones. Lava flows embedded in valleys reach lengths of .
Pyroclastic cones in Pali-Aike include Aymond, Colorado, Dinero, Fell and Negro. The vent Cerro del Diablo, a pyroclastic cone, is the youngest volcano in the field and has emitted both
ʻaʻā and
pahoehoe lava, which have a fresh appearance and no soil cover. The vents were origins of lava flows, which sometimes breached the vents. Some flows are older and covered with soil while younger ones are not. Such young lava flows also have surface features including
lava tunnels,
hornitos,
tumuli and a wrinkled surface. Some of these are heavily eroded while the southeastern part of the field features fresh-looking centres, where they form the "Basaltos del Diablo". The individual volcanoes are subdivided into three groups, which are referred to as "U1" (the plateau lavas), "U2" (the older centres) and "U3" (for the more recent vents). Maars are depressions in the ground which are encircled by a ring of sediment that rises above the surrounding terrain; they typically form where frozen or liquid water interacts with rising
magma and causes explosions. In Pali-Aike there are about 100 of them, with diameters ranging from to about , and they make up the characteristic topography of the volcanic field. The
periglacial ground is rich in ice and water, which might explain why there are so many maars in Pali-Aike. Notable among these lakes is Laguna Azul, a
crater lake which is located within a pyroclastic ring at the side of a scoria cone. This maar formed during three stages in three separate craters and is also the source of a lava flow.
Potrok Aike in comparison is much larger (crater diameter of ); its rim is barely recognizable and appears to be more akin to a maar. Laguna Timone is surrounded by a wide tuff ring and is among the largest maars in the Pali-Aike volcanic field, although the lake covers only part of the maar depression. Additional maars in the southwestern part of the field are the so-called "West Maar" and "East Maar", which contain the lakes Laguna Salsa and Laguna del Ruido respectively, Bismarck, Carlota, Los Flamencos and Laguna Salida/Laguna Ana. Apart from maars, there are
ephemeral lakes. A number of vents form various alignments, usually along northwestsoutheast and eastnortheastwestsouthwest lines; some older centres show a northsouth pattern. Such alignments occur when local lineations act as a pathway for magma to ascend to the crust and control not only the position of the vents, but also the shape of the volcanoes forming on top of the vents. These lines match the strike of the
Magallanes-Fagnano fault zone and the older Patagonian Austral Rift.
Faults within the field have been active in the Tertiary and into the
Holocene, and a
graben in the southwestern part of the field has diverted lava flows. The volcanic field is in the drainage basin of the
Gallegos River, which passes north of it. Its tributary
Rio Chico crosses the volcanic field from southwest to northeast. The terrain of the field is highly permeable to water, which later forms
wetlands that attract a number of birds and
springs that are used as a source of water. Maars are not the only water bodies within the field; lakes formed by
lava dams, glacial lakes and lakes formed by wind
deflation also exist. Some of these water bodies dry up late in summer, allowing wind to remove sediments from their lakebeds, which thus become the origin of long
dune fields. Active growth of such
windstreaks has been observed in Pali-Aike. Windstreaks are an uncommon occurrence on Earth; they are much more common on
Mars.
Regional Pali-Aike is part of the
Patagonian
back-arc, a province of
plateau lavas of
Cenozoic age. These plateau lavas are of
alkaline to
tholeiitic composition;
hawaiite,
trachyandesite and
trachyte are present in smaller amounts. From south to north these plateau lavas include Pali-Aike itself, Meseta Vizcachas, Meseta de la Muerte, Gran Meseta Central, Meseta Buenos Aires, Cerro Pedrero, Meseta de Somuncura, Pino Hachado and Buta Ranquil; Pali-Aike is the southernmost and youngest lava plateau in Patagonia. Their activity began 16million years ago, when the
Chile Ridge collided with the
Peru–Chile Trench and thus caused a tear in the subducting
slab and the formation of a
slab window beneath Patagonia. Another theory is that
slab rollback might instead be the mechanism by which volcanism is triggered in the Pali-Aike region. The age trends of volcanism have been interpreted as indicating either a southward migration or a northeastward one in the case of the plateau lavas, following the movement of the
triple junction to the north; in that case Pali-Aike would be an exception, probably due to local tectonic effects. However, some older plateau lavas in the north formed in response to an earlier ridge subduction event in the
Eocene and
Palaeocene. The actual Andean
volcanic arc is located west of Pali-Aike, in the form of the
Austral Volcanic Zone, a chain of
stratovolcanoes and one
volcanic field (
Fueguino), which is South America's southernmost volcano. The Camusu Aike volcanic field, dated at 2.5–2.9million years old, is northwest and the Morro Chico volcano about west of Pali-Aike. == Geology ==