VOLCANOES
Volcanoes often have powerful and destructive eruptions, but they're also quite fascinating. They vary considerably in terms of size, shape, petrologic composition, tectonic setting, and eruptive violence. Most volcanism on Earth (above sea level) is along subduction zones (e.g., Cascades of western North America, Aleutian Islands of Alaska, Central America, Andes Mountains of South America, Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia, parts of southern Europe). Other volcanoes are at hotspots (Hawaii, Yellowstone, Iceland, Afar, etc.) or along rift valleys (formed by tectonic divergence). See the “Eruptions” web log for daily updates on volcanism anywhere in the world.
KILAUEA VOLCANO (Hawaii)
MT. VESUVIUS (Italy)
MT. PINATUBO (Philippines)
KRAKATOA (Indonesia)
SOUFRIÈRE HILLS VOLCANO (Montserrat)
MT. MERAPI (Indonesia)
HOME REEF VOLCANO (Tonga)
JABAL AL-TAIR VOLCANO (Red Sea)
OL DOINYO LENGAI (Tanzania)
PACAYA VOLCANO (Guatemala)
(Short video clip of Pacaya, provided by Fred Sandoval)
MT. ETNA (Sicily)
MT. FUJI (Japan)
MAUNA LOA VOLCANO (Hawaii)
MT. SPURR (Alaska)
KERITH CRATER (Iceland)
PERIDOT MESA (Arizona, USA)
KILBOURNE HOLE CRATER (New Mexico, USA)
FILLMORE CRATERS VOLCANISM (Utah, USA)
PUU MAHANA VOLCANIC CONE (Hawaii)
MEDICINE LAKE VOLCANO (California, USA)
OL DOINYO NYUKIE (Kenya)
MT. KENYA VOLCANO (Kenya)
MAGADI TRACHYTE FLOOD LAVA (Kenya)
ELLENDALE LAMPROITE LAVA (Western Australia)
MT. EREBUS VOLCANO (Antarctica)
SIERRA GRANDE SHIELD VOLCANO (New Mexico, USA)
VALLES CALDERA (New Mexico, USA)
CHAITÉN VOLCANO (Chile)
MT. ST. HELENS (Washington, USA)