Kamchatka Volcanoes May Be Instrumental to the ‘Epilogue’
Activity at Kamchatka Volcanoes Could Increase Dramatically in the Period Leading to Collapse
There are about 165 volcanoes on Kamchatka Peninsula, 29 of which are still active. About 120 of the volcanoes are believed to have erupted during the Holocene Epoch (approximately 12,000 years ago to present time).
Klyuchevskaya, the highest and most active volcano on Kamchatka peninsula, ejects a thin plume of steam and ash on December 23, 2010, when this false-color image was taken by the ASTER instrument on NASA’s Terra satellite. Source: NASA-EO
ISS astronaut photograph of volcanoes on Kamchatka Peninsula (ISS025-E-17440) was acquired on November 19, 2010. Source: NASA-EO
Related Links:
- Satellite Images of activity at Klyuchevskaya Volcano Since December 2009
- Photographs of activity at Klyuchevskaya
Volcano Links:
FEWW Volcanic Activity Forecast
- Sumatra’s Mt Kerinci Erupts
- Volcano Watch Weekly: 23 April 2009
- Weekly Volcano Watch: 16 April 2009
- Weekly Volcano Watch: 2 April 2009
- Tonga’s Metis Shoal may be erupting
- Rumble III Volcano “blew its top!”
Other Related Links: