Volcanoes are Scary

(Quick side note, this is the first time I am submitting an assignment on time. Yay!) 

 

Volcanoes are Scary

Without actually looking at my past posts, I'm fairly confident that I have at least mentioned the ring of fire, which is that giant belt of volcanoes in spanning the entire Pacific Ocean, and also has most of the world's volcanoes. Peru, itself, is within this ring of fire, since its coast faces the Pacific (who would've known). The country has about 400 volcanoes, 16 of which are classified as Holocene. I really hope I'm not the only one who had to look up what that means; a Holocene volcano - according to Google - is a volcano that has been active in the last 11,700 years.

 

Most notable of these volcanoes are Ubinas and Sabancaya, the two most active of the volcanoes in recent history (as of writing). In fact, Ubinas had erupted just over 4 months ago, with six other eruptions occurring between 2006-2023. Sabancaya's last eruption was in 2016, and since 1986, it has had nine total eruptions, with most of them haappening between 1986-2003. Another notable volcano is El Misti, which had an eruption a year before Sabancaya's 1986 eruption.

 

Ubinas - WikipediaUbinas


Global Volcanism Program | Sabancaya

Sabancaya

 

Misti - WikipediaEl Misti




Comments

  1. This was a very cool post. What mitigation measures you'd suggest for this hazard?

    ReplyDelete

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