Pular (volcano)

Pular
Miñiques surrounding area with Pular, Cerro Pajonales and Socompa in the distance.
Highest point
Elevation6,233 m (20,449 ft)
Prominence1,898 m (6,227 ft)
ListingUltra
Coordinates24°11′15″S 68°03′15″W / 24.18750°S 68.05417°W / -24.18750; -68.05417
Naming
English translationThe Eyebrow
Language of nameKunza
Geography
Pular
Chile
LocationAntofagasta Region, Chile
Parent rangeAndes
Geology
Mountain typeStratovolcanoes
Last eruptionUnknown
Climbing
First ascentInka, pre-Columbian

Pular is a volcanic massif in the northern Chilean Andes, in the Antofagasta Region north of Socompa volcano. It consists of the individual mountains Pajonales and Pular, which are among the highest mountains in the region and of great cultural importance to the neighbouring towns of Socaire and Peine. Pular and Pajonales have multiple volcanic craters and have produced lava domes. The mountains were active during the last three million years; whether there was any activity in historical times is unclear. The mountains are largely unglaciated in the present, owing to the dry climate, although groundwater originates on them. During the last glacial maximum, glacial advances left a girdle of moraines around the massif.