Nevado Tres Cruces is located in the High Andes of
Copiapo and straddles the boundary between
Chile (
Atacama Region) and
Argentina (
Catamarca Province). The
Salar de Maricunga is located west of Nevado Tres Cruces, the Almagro valley north and its tributary the Barrancas Blancas valley northeast of it. The international road between Chile and Argentina from
Paso de San Francisco passes north of Nevado Tres Cruces; an
unpaved road runs through the Barrancas Blancas valley. The Rio Lomas and Rio Salado originate from its southwestern and southeastern flanks, respectively. The volcano is massive, covering an area of about , and consists of a long and wide north-south trending chain made up of at least three overlapping volcanoes. These volcanoes have diameters of and rise about above the surrounding terrain. The highest summit, and sixth-highest summit of South America, of Nevado Tres Cruces is the high southern summit, which is also the least eroded of the three volcanoes that make up Nevado Tres Cruces. The southern summit consists of two overlapping cones, the western and older one of which has two explosion craters while the eastern one is capped by a summit lava dome. The central volcano reaches an elevation of , has the steepest slopes and is tilted to the west. The northern volcano has a summit elevation of and is capped by a glacially eroded, wide crater. There are two even more minor summits at the north end of the massif, Punta Torre and Punta Atacama . The volcanoes are formed by
explosion craters,
lava domes including couleés,
lava flows,
tephra, and
base surge and
pyroclastic flow deposits. Fallout of explosive eruptions cover the slopes of the southern summit and deposits of a large
Plinian eruption and its
eruption column cover much of Nevado Tres Cruces and its surroundings.
Normal faults cut across the volcanic structures and a north-northwest trending fault system appears to have directed the development of the three volcanoes. Domo del Indio on the southeastern flank is wide and high. Between it and Nevado Tres Cruces lies a wide and deep
explosion crater that contains the La Espinilla dome, which is high and wide. Another lava dome is known as Domo las Vicuñas. The Tres Cruces Ignimbrite was erupted by Nevado Tres Cruces and lies between Nevado Tres Cruces and Ojos del Salado and reaches a thickness of . It covers a surface area of . The ignimbrite consists of
pumice and
volcanic ash, is poorly welded and has a low crystal content. These edifices rise over older volcanoes, which crop out north of Nevado Tres Cruces in the form of the volcanoes Cristi ( high), Lemp and Rodrigo. The latter has a
caldera at elevation. Lemp is located just south of Rodrigo. Puntiagudo crops out south of Nevado Tres Cruces. Two other centres lie on the southwestern foot: high Paitur and Trioblite. The older structures are smoothened by erosion and lack primary features. A thick and large lava flow crops out west of the volcano; it has a surface area of and a thickness of . Three older lava domes, all heavily eroded, are found on the western flank.
Glaciation Small
glaciers occur on Nevado Tres Cruces on the eastern and southern sides above elevation. They are best developed above elevation and consist of small ice bodies (none exceeding ) in glacial
cirques and at the edges of lava flows. One of these is hosted in a cirque on the southeastern flank of the southern summit. Ice area was constant between 1937 and 1956 but declined by almost half between 1985 and 2016. Non-moving ice without
crevasses has been found on the northern summit, and there are debris-covered glaciers on the volcanoes. Some sources however deny that any glacier occurs on Nevado Tres Cruces.
Moraines occur above elevation and a well-developed
terminal moraine at the foot of Nevado Tres Cruces, at elevation, has been broken by the Lamas River. There are
cirques at on the eastern sides of Nevado Tres Cruces and traces of
periglacial occur. Presently, the
equilibrium line altitude lies at about ; during the
Last Glacial Maximum the equilibrium line altitude descended to . == Geology ==