Regional The region has been heavily affected by
volcanism, including large
ignimbrites and
stratovolcanoes extending into
Chile. Volcanic rocks include
andesite,
dacite and
rhyodacite with the former dominating in the Chilean stratovolcanoes and the latter in the ignimbrites. The dry regional climate means that there is little
erosion and that volcanic centres are well conserved. The surface covered by volcanic rocks amounts to about . Volcanic activity in the region is the consequence of the
subduction of the
Nazca Plate beneath the
South American Plate in the
Peru-Chile Trench. This process has formed three main volcanic zones at the Andes, the
Northern Volcanic Zone, the
Central Volcanic Zone and the
Southern Volcanic Zone. Pastos Grandes is part of the Central Volcanic Zone along with about 50 volcanoes with recent activity and other
ignimbrite generating volcanic centres. This ignimbritic volcanism began in the late
Miocene and formed a large field known as the
Altiplano-Puna volcanic complex, a large volcanic province which clusters around the
tripoint between
Argentina, Bolivia and Chile.
Local Pastos Grandes is a nested
caldera which underwent repeated collapse in the past, most likely along defined sectors of its rim. It has been subdivided into two calderas, a larger Chuhuila caldera and the smaller Pastos Grandes caldera. The caldera is about wide and had a maximum depth of . Cerro Pastos Grandes is high and shows traces of a
sector collapse. It might be a high
resurgent dome and is flanked by
lava domes on the north-northwestern, southwestern and southeastern side. The activity of Pastos Grandes may be associated with the ongoing development of a
pluton underneath the caldera. Major regional
faults running through the region have influenced the shape of the calderas, giving them an elliptic shape which is also evident at Pastos Grandes. Pastos Grandes has erupted
calc-alkaline rocks which define a
dacite suite. Eruption products of Pastos Grandes are rich in
potassium. Minerals encountered in the rock include
amphibole,
biotite,
plagioclase,
quartz and
sanidine. The magmas underwent slow evolution in the 1,000,000 years preceding each eruption.
Plutonic rocks linked to Pastos Grandes were erupted from the Chascon-Runtu Jarita vents 94,000 - 85,000 years ago.
Eruption history Three large ignimbrite-forming eruptions occurred at Pastos Grandes during its history. At first, it was assumed that large eruptions first occurred 8.1 million years ago, a second 5.6 million years and a third 2.3 million years ago. However, it is not clear which of any eruption formed the caldera. A number of ignimbrites has been attributed to Pastos Grandes, some of them may be different names for the same ignimbrite: • The 8.33 ± 0.15 million years old Sifon ignimbrite has a volume of over , but it is not certain that Pastos Grandes was actually the source. • The 6.2 ± 0.7 million years old Pastos Grandes I or Chuhuhuilla ignimbrite has with a volume of over . • The 3.3 ± 0.4 million years old Pastos Grandes II/Juvina ignimbrite has a volume of from the Juvina centre. • The 5.45 ± 0.02 million years old Chuhuilla ignimbrite with a volume of and was responsible for the first caldera-forming cycle. • The 2.89 ± 0.01 million years old Pastos Grandes ignimbrite that has a volume of and is part of the second caldera-forming cycle. The 6.1 million years old Carcote ignimbrite may also have originated here. The 5.22 ± 0.02 million years old Alota ignimbrite was also attributed to Pastos Grandes, although it originated in a centre northeast of the Pastos Grandes caldera known as Cerro Juvina. These ignimbrites crop out on the outside of the Pastos Grandes caldera, where they extend to distances of , but also cover parts of the caldera. Given the volumes involved, at least some of the eruptions are classified as 8 on the
volcanic explosivity index. Pastos Grandes was volcanically active for a long time, more than many other Altiplano-Puna volcanic complex centres. Later more recent volcanic centres formed within the caldera, the youngest of these centres are relatively recent Such recent centres close to Pastos Grandes are
Cerro Chao and
Cerro Chascon-Runtu Jarita complex. The former of which lies on a lineament that appears to coincide with the caldera rim of Pastos Grandes, and the latter seems to rise from the ring fault of Pastos Grandes. but is apparently unrelated to the caldera. Cerro Chascon-Runtu Jarita is less than 100,000 years old according to
argon-argon dating. This and ongoing
geothermal manifestations suggest that volcanic activity may still occur at Pastos Grandes. Finally, Pastos Grandes and
Cerro Guacha may be the heat source for the
El Tatio geothermal field west of Pastos Grandes. == Lake ==