BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature
Guides
Criticism & Essays Criticism &
Essays
Questions & Answers Questions &
Answers
Lesson Plans Lesson
Plans
My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help
Not What You Meant?  There are 7 definitions for Las Palmas.

La Palma

Print-Friendly
About 7 pages (2,059 words)

Bookmark and Share Questions on this topic? Just ask!
La Palma
Flag of La Palma
Flag of La Palma
Geography
Location Atlantic Ocean
Coordinates 28°40′N, 17°52′W
Archipelago Canary Islands
Area 706 km²
Highest point Roque de los Muchachos 2,423 m
Administration
Flag of Spain Spain
Autonomous Community Canary Islands
Province Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Largest city Los Llanos de Aridane (19,659 (2004))
Demographics
Population 86,062 (as of 2006)
Density 121/km²
Satellite image of La Palma, with the Caldera de Taburiente visible (north is to the lower right).
Satellite image of La Palma, with the Caldera de Taburiente visible (north is to the lower right).

La Palma, a Spanish island, is one of the Canary Islands in the Atlantic Ocean off Africa. It is located at 28°40′N, 17°52′W.

Contents

Description

La Palma has an area of 706 km² making it the fifth largest of the seven main canary islands. The total population is about 85,000, of which 18,000 (2003 data) live in the capital, Santa Cruz de la Palma and about 20,000 (2004 data) in Los Llanos de Aridane. La Palma's geography is a result of the volcanic formation of the island. The highest peaks reach about 2400 m above sea level, and the foundation of the island reaches more than 3000 m below sea level. The northern part of La Palma is dominated by the Caldera de Taburiente, the largest erosion crater in the world, with a width of 9 km and a depth of 1500 m. It is surrounded by a ring of mountains ranging from 1600 m to 2400 m in height. Only the deep Barranco de las Angustias canyon leads into the inner area of the caldera which is a national park. It can be reached only by hiking. The outer slopes are cut by numerous gorges which run from 2000 m down to the sea. Today, only few of these carry water due to the water tunnels. From the caldera to the south runs the ridge Cumbre Nueva. The southern part of La Palma is dominated by the Cumbre Vieja, a ridge formed by numerous volcanic cones built of ashes, providing a rather bizarre landscape. Several of these volcanoes are still active. The southern cape Punta de Fuencaliente, where the most recent volcanic activities took place, consists of lava and ashes. La Palma is dominated by the colors blue, green and black. Blue is the surrounding ubiquitous sea. Green comes from the abundant plant life which is the most diverse in the Canary Islands. Black comes from the volcanic rocks that still fill the landscape, and from the numerous small beaches made of black sand.

Government

The island is part of the province of Santa Cruz de Tenerife. The island is divided into 14 municipalities:

Volcano

A view of La Palma from its highest point.
A view of La Palma from its highest point.

The island was formed as a seamount by volcanic activities like all of the Canary Islands. La Palma is the most active volcano of the Canary Islands and was formed 3-4 million years ago. It rises 3500 m from the seafloor to the sea surface and reaches a height of 2426 m above sea level. 500,000 years ago the primary volcano Taburiente collapsed with a giant landslide which formed the Caldera de Taburiente. The known historic eruptions are:

  • 1470-1492 Montaña Quemada
  • 1585 Tajuya near El Paso
  • 1646 Volcán San Martin
  • 1677 Volcán San Antonio
  • 1712 El Charco
  • 1949 Volcán San Juan, Duraznero, Hoyo Negro
  • 1971 Volcán Teneguía

During the 1949 eruption of the Cumbre Vieja a small amount of surface subsidence occurred close to the small volcano vent. In a BBC Horizon program broadcast on October 12 2000, two scientists used this surface anomaly to claim that half of La Palma slipped four meters downwards into the Atlantic Ocean.[1][2] They believe that this process was driven by the pressure caused by the rising magma heating and vaporizing water trapped within the structure of the island. They projected that during a future eruption, the western half of the island, weighing perhaps 500 billion tonnes, could slide into the ocean. This could generate a giant wave known as a megatsunami around 900 m high in the region of the islands. The wave would fan out across the Atlantic and strike the Caribbean and the eastern American seaboard some eight hours later with a wave possibly 90 m or more high causing massive devastation along the coastlines. The incident was further explored in a BBC docu-drama called End Day which went through several hypothetical events of disastrous proportions. There have been a number of reports disputing these claims. The Tsunami Society published a statement in 2003 stating that they "would like to halt the scaremongering from these unfounded reports."[3] The major points raised in this report include:

  • The conclusion that half of Cumbre Vieja dropped 4 m during the 1949 eruption is erroneous, and contradicted by physical evidence.
  • No evidence was sought or shown that there is a fault line separating a "block" of La Palma from the other half.
  • Physical evidence shows a 4 km long line in the rock, but the models assumed a 25 km line, for which no physical evidence was given. Further, there is no evidence shown that the 4 km long line extends beyond the surface.
  • There has never been an Atlantic megatsunami in recorded history.

However, there is now a growing consensus within the scientific community that large-scale collapses of volcanic islands do occur and that large tsunamis have occurred in the Atlantic in the geological past. Despite this there is still no evidence reliably proving a cause and effect. All the documented large scale tsunamis in the Atlantic have been verifiably attributed to underwater earthquakes and not island collapses. Evidence of Tsunami deposits has been reported from the Caribbean and the Canary Islands. A ground survey of the Island conducted in the 1990s found a small (but within error) movement of the supposedly detached block away from the rest of the Island. Since the 1990s the area has been, and continues to be, continually monitored and no movement has been detected.

Fauna

The following animals live on La Palma :

History

The Canary Islands had been settled by the native Canarians called Guanches whose origin is still controversial. They had a Neolithic culture divided into several clans led by chiefs. Their name for La Palma was Benahoare. The main remnants of this culture are their cave dwellings, enigmatic petroglyphs and paved stone paths through the mountains. After the Spanish occupation of La Palma, the native Canarians vanished by either being killed, sold into slavery or by assimilating into the Spanish population. It is probable that the Canary Islands were known to the Phoenicians and the Greeks. The Genoese navigator Lancelotto Malocello reached the archipelago in 1312 and remained for two decades until expelled by a native uprising. In 1404 the Spaniards began the conquest of the islands. Though the first landing on La Palma was in 1405, it took until 1493 and several bloody battles until the last resistance of the natives was broken. The conqueror of La Palma was Alonso Fernández de Lugo, who defeated Tanausu, the last king on the island. He ruled the area known as Acero (Caldera de Taburiente). Tanausu was ambushed after agreeing to a truce arranged by Fernández de Lugo and Juan de Palma, a Guanche who had converted to Christianity and who was a relative of Tanausu. For the next two centuries, settlements on La Palma became rich as the island served as a trading post on the way to the New World. La Palma received immigrants from Castile, Portugal, Majorca, Flanders, and Catalonia.

Transportation

La Palma has a road network of some 1,200 km. All the main roads are asphalted and in a good state, although there are many sharp bends, some very narrow. In order to proceed to some small villages in the north of the island it is necessary to travel on earth tracks. A road circumnavigating the island, about 180kms long exists. Several bus routes exist that unite the main localities on the island running to different timetables. For more details see [1] La Palma Airport serves the Island and several airlines run services to and from it.

Water tunnels

The most famous structures of La Palma are the water tunnels which carry the water from sources in the mountains to cities, villages and farms (mainly banana plantations). La Palma receives plenty of water due to the clouds brought by the Trade Winds. The tunnels were carved into the rocks over centuries. One can follow some of the tunnels by hiking, a popular activity for tourists (Compare to the levadas of Madeira). The tour to the Marcos y Corderos waterfall and springs is also popular.

Observatories

A sea of clouds below the William Herschel Telescope.
A sea of clouds below the William Herschel Telescope.

Due to the location of the island and the height of its mountains, some 2400 m above sea level, a number of international observatories have been built on the Roque de los Muchachos. The particular geographical position and climate cause clouds to form between 1000 m and 2000 m, usually leaving the observatories with a clear sky. Often, the view from the top of the volcano is a sea of clouds covering the eastern part of the island. Telescopes at the observatory include:

The DOT and the SST have been specifically built to study the Sun.

References

  1. ^ Ward, S.N. and S.J. Day (2001). "Cumbre Vieja Volcano – Potential collapse and tsunami at La Palma, Canary Islands". Geophysical Research Letters 28.
  2. ^ BBC (October 10 2006). Mega-tsunami: Wave of Destruction. Retrieved on 2006-09-11.
  3. ^ Tsunami Society (January 15, 2003). Mega Tsunami Hazards. Retrieved on 2006-09-11.

External links

La Palma island

Tsunami threat?

Telescopes

View More Summaries on La Palma
 
Ask any question on La Palma and get it answered FAST!
Answer questions in BookRags Q&A and earn points toward
discounted or even FREE Study Guides and other BookRags products!
Learn more about BookRags Q&A
Copyrights
La Palma from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

Article Navigation
Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags




About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy