Author: Dr. Marcus Thornfield, Volcanologist and Geophysical Researcher
Volcanoes
Mount Fuji hasn’t erupted since 1707. That’s more than three centuries of silence from Japan’s most iconic volcano, which sits there
Volcanoes
The Avenida de los Volcanes stretches 325 kilometers through Ecuador’s spine, a geological fever dream where 85 volcanoes crowd together like teeth
Volcanoes
Triton doesn’t care about your Earth-centric definition of what a volcano should be. Neptune’s largest moon shoots nitrogen geysers 8 kilometers
Volcanoes
In February 1943, a Mexican farmer named Dionisio Pulido watched his cornfield crack open and start spewing ash. Within a week, Paricutín volcano had grown
Volcanoes
Introductions are supposed to be friendly and welcoming. “Welcome to volcanoes!” But there’s nothing welcoming about mountains that explode
Volcanoes
Mauna Loa sprawls across Hawaii like a geological pancake, its slopes so gentle you could probably skateboard down them if you weren’
Volcanoes
Around 1600 BCE, the island of Thera—what we now call Santorini—decided to do something spectacular: it exploded with the force of roughly 40,000 Hiroshima bombs.
Volcanoes
In Azerbaijan, there’s a mountain that’s been burning for about 4,000 years. Not metaphorically—actually burning, with flames licking out of
Volcanoes
March 28, 1982. A volcano nobody was particularly worried about decided to remind southern Mexico that complacency is a luxury geology doesn’
Volcanoes
Picture a mountain vomiting concrete. That’s basically what a lahar is—except the concrete is hot, it smells like sulfur, and it can travel at 60
