Geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos Açores

GEODYNAMICS AND NATURAL HAZARDS IN THE AZORES ISLANDS. The central islands of the Azores archipelago exhibit significant volcanic and seismic activity. The most important tectonic structure responsible for this activity seems to be the leaky transform Terceira Rift, a branch of the Azores triple jun...

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Main Author: António de Brum Ferreira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CEG 2005-12-01
Series:Finisterra - Revista Portuguesa de Geografia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ceg.ul.pt/finisterra/numeros/2005-79/79_09.pdf
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spelling doaj-80e3000a43af4a8094a6ebb15a3579bd2021-08-02T18:39:02ZengCEGFinisterra - Revista Portuguesa de Geografia0430-50272005-12-01XL79103120Geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos AçoresAntónio de Brum FerreiraGEODYNAMICS AND NATURAL HAZARDS IN THE AZORES ISLANDS. The central islands of the Azores archipelago exhibit significant volcanic and seismic activity. The most important tectonic structure responsible for this activity seems to be the leaky transform Terceira Rift, a branch of the Azores triple junction separating the Eurasia and Africa plates. In historical time (since the XV century), the most frequent volcanic eruptions were of the hawaiian and strombolian types, but the level of explosivity has occasionally reached subplinian magnitude, as it happened in the Fogo (1563) and Furnas (1630) volcanoes (hydromagmatic eruptions in the calderas). As in other volcanic regions of the world, effusive volcanism is not particularly dangerous in the Azores islands; explosive activity, however, can be catastrophic (ignimbrites formed in some islands over the last millennia). Still, throughout historical time, earthquakes have been the most dangerous natural phenomena in the Azores, sometimes bringing about tragic consequences: in 1757, an earthquake struck the São Jorge island, killing one thousand people (20% of the total population). But the most catastrophic seismic event of all occurred in the island of São Miguel in 1522: an earthquake triggered an earthflow that submerged the capital (Vila Franca do Campo) and killed nearly all of its inhabitants (several thousands). Whether or not they are triggered by earthquakes, mass movements are most common along the coast of the islands: huge falls and rotational slides are attested for by the so-called fajãs, detrital platforms on the foot of cliffs that are several hundred meters high; in death-defying fashion, some of these platforms are actually inhabitated.http://www.ceg.ul.pt/finisterra/numeros/2005-79/79_09.pdfVolcanic activitySeismicityLandslidesNatural hazardsAzores.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author António de Brum Ferreira
spellingShingle António de Brum Ferreira
Geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos Açores
Finisterra - Revista Portuguesa de Geografia
Volcanic activity
Seismicity
Landslides
Natural hazards
Azores.
author_facet António de Brum Ferreira
author_sort António de Brum Ferreira
title Geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos Açores
title_short Geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos Açores
title_full Geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos Açores
title_fullStr Geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos Açores
title_full_unstemmed Geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos Açores
title_sort geodinâmica e perigosidade natural nas ilhas dos açores
publisher CEG
series Finisterra - Revista Portuguesa de Geografia
issn 0430-5027
publishDate 2005-12-01
description GEODYNAMICS AND NATURAL HAZARDS IN THE AZORES ISLANDS. The central islands of the Azores archipelago exhibit significant volcanic and seismic activity. The most important tectonic structure responsible for this activity seems to be the leaky transform Terceira Rift, a branch of the Azores triple junction separating the Eurasia and Africa plates. In historical time (since the XV century), the most frequent volcanic eruptions were of the hawaiian and strombolian types, but the level of explosivity has occasionally reached subplinian magnitude, as it happened in the Fogo (1563) and Furnas (1630) volcanoes (hydromagmatic eruptions in the calderas). As in other volcanic regions of the world, effusive volcanism is not particularly dangerous in the Azores islands; explosive activity, however, can be catastrophic (ignimbrites formed in some islands over the last millennia). Still, throughout historical time, earthquakes have been the most dangerous natural phenomena in the Azores, sometimes bringing about tragic consequences: in 1757, an earthquake struck the São Jorge island, killing one thousand people (20% of the total population). But the most catastrophic seismic event of all occurred in the island of São Miguel in 1522: an earthquake triggered an earthflow that submerged the capital (Vila Franca do Campo) and killed nearly all of its inhabitants (several thousands). Whether or not they are triggered by earthquakes, mass movements are most common along the coast of the islands: huge falls and rotational slides are attested for by the so-called fajãs, detrital platforms on the foot of cliffs that are several hundred meters high; in death-defying fashion, some of these platforms are actually inhabitated.
topic Volcanic activity
Seismicity
Landslides
Natural hazards
Azores.
url http://www.ceg.ul.pt/finisterra/numeros/2005-79/79_09.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT antoniodebrumferreira geodinamicaeperigosidadenaturalnasilhasdosacores
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