Is Cotopaxi Filipino?

According to locals who speak Quechua, "coto" means 'neck' and "paxi" means 'moon' [Quechua q'oto 'throat' + Aymara phakhsi 'moon'].[8][9] This refers to the crater of Cotopaxi that looks like a crescent moon. The mountain was honored as a "Sacred Mountain" by local Andean people, even before the Inca invasion in the 15th century. It was worshiped as "rain sender", which served as the guarantor of the land's fertility, and at the same time its summit was revered as a place where gods lived.

Historic eruptionsEdit

With 87 known eruptions, Cotopaxi is one of Ecuador's most active volcanoes.[2] The first recorded eruption of Cotopaxi was in 1534. This eruption appears to have deposited an ash layer in the lakes of El Cajas National Park that has been dated to 450±70 cal BP.[10]

Cotopaxi's most violent eruptions in historical times occurred in the years 1742, 1744, 1768, and 1877. The 1744 and 1768 events destroyed the colonial town of Latacunga. During the June 26, 1877 eruption, pyroclastic flows descended on all sides of the mountain melting the entire ice cap, with lahars traveling more than 100km [62mi] into the Pacific Ocean and western Amazon basin draining the valley.[2] The city of Latacunga was again leveled completely due to the mudslide deposits.

The eruption on 19 June 1742 was witnessed by the scientists Pierre Bouguer and Charles-Marie de La Condamine, members of the French Geodesic Mission, as they descended from nearby Guagua Pichincha.[11]

Block of lava encased in tephra products of different types of eruption at Cotopaxi

There was a major eruption from 1903 to 1904, and minor activity persisted until at least 1940 and possibly 1942.[2] [Note that direct observations of minor eruptions can be difficult because of bad weather, hence the uncertainty about the 1942 "eruption."] The same source also reported increased thermal/seismic, non-eruptive activity in 1975 and 2002. In the increased activity of 2002, fumarolic activity and sulfuric emissions increased and ice around the inside and on the southeastern side of the cone started to melt. However, no actual eruption was observed.[2]

In 2015, two large phreatic [steam] eruptions on the morning of August 14 marked a new phase of volcanic activity.[12][13] The volcano "remains in a very abnormal situation. In August, 2,100 earthquakes were recorded and emission rates of sulfur dioxide reach approximately 20,000 tonnes per day [19,700long ton/d; 22,000short ton/d]. The government estimates some 300,000 people are at risk from the volcano in the provinces of Cotopaxi, Tungurahua, Napo and Pichincha.[14]

The first European who tried to climb the mountain was Alexander von Humboldt in 1802; however, he only reached a height of about 4,500m [14,760ft]. In 1858 Moritz Wagner investigated the mountain, but he could not reach the summit either.[citation needed]

On November 28, 1872, German geologist Wilhelm Reiss and his Colombian partner, Angel Escobar, finally reached the summit of Cotopaxi.[15]

In 1873 it was summitted by German Geologist Moritz Alphons Stübel and four Ecuadorians, Rafael Jantui, Melchor Páez, Vicente Ramón and Eusebio Rodriguez.[16][17]

In 1880 British mountaineer Edward Whymper and the Italian guides Jean-Antoine Carrel and Louis Carrel made the third recorded ascent of Cotopaxi and spent a night on the summit.[18]

Painters Rudolf Reschreiter[de] and Hans Meyer reached the summit in 1903, and many of Reschreiter's paintings feature a view of Cotopaxi.[19][bettersourceneeded]

In the late 20th century, summiting Cotopaxi became a major tourist draw. The José F. Ribas Refuge [Refugio José Félix Ribas] was built in 1971 at an elevation of 4,864m [15,960ft] and enlarged in 2005.

A tragedy occurred here on Easter Sunday 1996 when an avalanche partially buried the Refuge and dozens of tourists. The glacier above the Refuge was probably weakened by an earthquake that had shaken the entire Province of Cotopaxi for several days prior to the avalanche. In the warm midday sun a huge portion of the ice wall broke loose. Being Easter, there were many day visitors on the mountain who were buried in the ice and snow. Those trapped in the Refuge broke windows on the downhill side to climb to safety, but 13 people died on the slope above. The Refuge itself is located in a valley and consequently vulnerable to future avalanches.[20]

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