Poas National Park
The park can be reached along the Road Alajuela- San
Isidro- Dulce Nombre- Fraijanes- Poasito-park-headquarters. Distance
47 kms. from Alajuela
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Poás Volcano National Park, which extends over
5,600 hectares, is located on the continental divide of the
volcanic Central Mountain Range, from 1,500 meters above sea
level on the Caribbean side to 2,300 above sea level on the
Pacific side.
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Poás is a compound basaltic volano
that towers 2,708 meters above sea level. It has a slow,
effusive activity of the lake kind. Since 1989, it has geatly
increased its emission of gases, causing acid rain that has
damaged the strawberry and coffee plantations in the Central
Western Valley. Depending on the direction and velocity of the
wind, unpleasant odors can be detected at places as far away as
Alajuela, Grecia, San Ramón, Sarchí and Naranjo.
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At the rim there are two craters. The
main crater measures 1,5 kms. in diameter and is 300 meters
deep. It has a circular hot-water lake at the bottom, 350 meters
in diameter, and a cinder cone 40 meters high with very active
fumaroles.
The second crater is the seat of a cold-water lake, Botos,
which clearly originates from rainfall and drains into the
Caribbean by means of the River Angel, a tributary of the River
Sarapiquí.
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There are four main habitats in the park: areas
with no o very scarce vegetation, an area of arrayans, a stunted
forest and a cloud forest. In the latter which is very shady and
humid, most of the trees, such as the oak, cedar and white
Podocarpus, grow to heights of some 20 meters and are completly
covered in moss, liverwort, and other plants. On the slopes of
the Caribbean Sector, the forests are taller and more humid,
with a wealth of palms, tree ferns and epiphytes. Identification
has been made in both forest masses of 79 species of birds,
including the sooty robin, resplendent quetzal, black guan and
emerald toucanet. There are not many mammals in the highlands of
the park, although coyotes, long-tailed weasels, amazon Skunks
and some felines live on the Caribbean slopes.
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| Poás volcano has a long
history of eruptions that range from emissions of hot vapors and
muddy water to blowouts of ash and incandescent rocks. On 25th
of January, 1910 an enourmous column of ash that was over 8000
meters high was visible from several different places around the
county. The last period of violent eruptions with large clouds
of ash and incandescent rocks took place between 1952-1954.
Because of its geyserlike eruptions when columns of muddy water
and steam shoot up into the air, Poás is known as the largest
geyser in the world. This is a phenomenon that ca be repeated
within a period of several minutes or not take place again for
several years.
(Text and pictures on this
page were taken from a public domain source and modified by
Michael Dodson and Denny Genovese)
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