Online Encyclopedia

COTOPAXI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 250 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COTOPAXI  , a

mountain of the
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Andes, in Ecuador, South
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America, 35 M . S.S.E. of
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Quito, remarkable as the loftiest active
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volcano in the
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world . The earliest outbursts on record took place in 1532 and 1533; and since then the eruptions have been both numerous and destructive . Among the most important are those of 1744, 1746, 1766, 1768 and 1803 . In 1744 the thunderings of the volcano were heard at Honda on the Rio Magdalena, about 500 M. distant; in 1768 the quantity of ashes ejected was so
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great that • it covered all the lesser vegetation as far as
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Riobamba; and in 1803 Humboldt reports that at the
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port of Guayaquil, 16o m. from the
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crater, he heard the noise day and
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night like continued discharges of a battery . There were considerable outbursts in 1851, 1855, 1856, 1864 and 1877 . In 1802 Humboldt made a vain attempt to scale the cone, and pronounced the enterprise impossible; and the failure of
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Jean
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Baptiste Boussingault in 1831, and the double failure of M . Wagner in 1858, seemed to confirm his opinion . In 1872, however, Dr Wilhelm Reiss succeeded on the 27th and 28th of November in reaching the top; in the May of the following
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year the same feat was accomplished by Dr A . Stubel, and he was followed by T . Wolf in 1877, M. von Thielmann in 1878 and
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Edward Whymper in 1880 . Cotopaxi is frequently described as one of the most beautiful mountain masses of the world, rivalling the celebrated Fujiyama of
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Japan in its symmetry of outline, but overtopping it by more than 7000 ft .

It is more than 15,000 ft. higher than

Vesuvius, over 7000 ft. higher than Teneriffe, and nearly 2000 ft. higher than Popocatepetl . Its slope, according to Orton, is 300, according to Wagner 29°, the north-western side being slightly steeper than the south-eastern . The apical angle is 122° 30' . The snowfall is heavier on the eastern side of the cone which is permanently covered, while the western side is usually
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left
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bare, a phenomenon occasioned by the
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action of the moist trade winds from the
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Atlantic . Its height according to Whymper is 19,613 ft., and its crater is 2300 ft. in diameter from N. to S., 165o ft. from E. to W., and has an approximate
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depth of 1200 ft . It is bordered by a rim of trachytic rock, forming a black coronet above the greyish volcanic dust and sand which covers its sides to a great depth . Whymper found snow and ice under this sand . On the
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southern slope, at a height of 15,059 ft., is a bare cone of porphyritic
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andesite called El Picacho, " the beak," or Cabeza del Inca, " the Inca's head," with dark cliffs rising fully
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I000 ft., which according to tradition is the
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original
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summit of the volcano blown off at the first-known eruption of 1532 . The summit of Cotopaxi is usually enveloped in clouds; and even in the clearest month of the year it is rarely visible for more than eight or ten days . Its eruptions produce enormous quantities of pumice, and deep layers of mud, volcanic sand and pumice surround it on the plateau . Of the air currents about and above Cotopaxi, Wagner says (Naturw . Reisen im trop .

Amerika, p . 514) : " On the Tacunga Plateau, at a height of 8000

Paris feet, the prevailing direction of the wind is meridional, usually from the south in the
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morning, and frequently from the north in the evening; but over the summit of Cotopaxi, at a height of 18,000 ft., the north-west wind always prevails throughout the day . The gradually-widening volcanic cloud continually takes a south-eastern direction over the rim of the crater; at a height, however, of about 21,000 ft. it suddenly turns to the north-west, and maintains that direction till it reaches a height of at least . 28,000 ft .

End of Article: COTOPAXI
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