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Methodology for the study of the Mexican Volcanic Belt; Metodologia para el estudio del Cinturon Volcanico Mexicano

Abstract

The Mexican Volcanic Belt (MVB) is an structure 20 to 150 kilometers wide an {approx}1000 km long, oriented approximately east-west, from nearby Puerto Vallarta up until Veracruz; it contains a great number ({approx}7000) of volcanic apparatus or volcanic centers (Verma, 1987a, and the cited references in this paper). Fig. 1 represents the location of some of its main volcanic centers. The MVB forms part of the ring of fire that extends all along the circumpacific region (see Fig. 2) named this way because it refers to a very high volcanoes population (many of them active volcanoes), to its seismic activity and to the large geothermal manifestations. [Espanol] El Cinturon Volcanico Mexicano (CVM) es una estructura de 20 a 150 kilometros de ancho, {approx}1,000 km de largo, orientada aproximadamente este-oeste desde cerca de Puerto Vallarta hasta Veracruz; contiene gran numero ({approx}7,000) de aparatos o centros volcanicos (Verma, 1987a, y las referencias citadas en este trabajo). La figura 1 presenta la localizacion de algunos de sus principales centros volcanicos. El CVM forma parte del llamado anillo del fuego, que se extiende a todo lo largo de la region circumpacifica (vease la Fig. 2), denominada asi porque se trata de una poblacion muy  More>>
Authors:
Pal Verma, Surendra [1] 
  1. Instituto de Investigaciones Electricas, Cuernavaca (Mexico)
Publication Date:
Dec 31, 1990
Product Type:
Miscellaneous
Report Number:
ETDE-MX-99717750
Reference Number:
SCA: 580000; 150100; PA: MX-98:000224; EDB-99:047665; SN: 98002001435
Resource Relation:
Other Information: DN: Sep-Oct 1990 issue; PBD: 1990; Related Information: Is Part Of IIE Bulletin: selected articles from the 1990 issues of `boletin iie`; PB: [280] p.; IIE Bulletin, v. 14(5)
Subject:
58 GEOSCIENCES; 15 GEOTHERMAL ENERGY; VOLCANIC REGIONS; VOLCANOES; GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES; VOLCANISM; GEOLOGY; GEOCHEMISTRY; GEOTHERMAL ENERGY; GEOTHERMAL FIELDS
OSTI ID:
334143
Country of Origin:
Mexico
Language:
Spanish
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: ISSN 0185-0059; Other: ON: DE99717750; TRN: MX9800224
Availability:
Available from Unidad de Informacion Tecnologica, Instituto de Investigaciones Electricas, Av. Reforma 113, col. Palmira, 62490 Temixco, Mor., Mexico, Tel: (73) 18 38 11 ext. 7138, Fax: (73) 18 24 61; OSTI as DE99717750
Submitting Site:
MX
Size:
pp. 224-229
Announcement Date:
May 10, 1999

Citation Formats

Pal Verma, Surendra. Methodology for the study of the Mexican Volcanic Belt; Metodologia para el estudio del Cinturon Volcanico Mexicano. Mexico: N. p., 1990. Web.
Pal Verma, Surendra. Methodology for the study of the Mexican Volcanic Belt; Metodologia para el estudio del Cinturon Volcanico Mexicano. Mexico.
Pal Verma, Surendra. 1990. "Methodology for the study of the Mexican Volcanic Belt; Metodologia para el estudio del Cinturon Volcanico Mexicano." Mexico.
@misc{etde_334143,
title = {Methodology for the study of the Mexican Volcanic Belt; Metodologia para el estudio del Cinturon Volcanico Mexicano}
author = {Pal Verma, Surendra}
abstractNote = {The Mexican Volcanic Belt (MVB) is an structure 20 to 150 kilometers wide an {approx}1000 km long, oriented approximately east-west, from nearby Puerto Vallarta up until Veracruz; it contains a great number ({approx}7000) of volcanic apparatus or volcanic centers (Verma, 1987a, and the cited references in this paper). Fig. 1 represents the location of some of its main volcanic centers. The MVB forms part of the ring of fire that extends all along the circumpacific region (see Fig. 2) named this way because it refers to a very high volcanoes population (many of them active volcanoes), to its seismic activity and to the large geothermal manifestations. [Espanol] El Cinturon Volcanico Mexicano (CVM) es una estructura de 20 a 150 kilometros de ancho, {approx}1,000 km de largo, orientada aproximadamente este-oeste desde cerca de Puerto Vallarta hasta Veracruz; contiene gran numero ({approx}7,000) de aparatos o centros volcanicos (Verma, 1987a, y las referencias citadas en este trabajo). La figura 1 presenta la localizacion de algunos de sus principales centros volcanicos. El CVM forma parte del llamado anillo del fuego, que se extiende a todo lo largo de la region circumpacifica (vease la Fig. 2), denominada asi porque se trata de una poblacion muy alta de volcanes (mucho de ellos activos), de la actividad sismica y de grandes manifestaciones geotermicas.}
place = {Mexico}
year = {1990}
month = {Dec}
}