Volcanoes
The Cultural Significance of Volcanoes
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Mount Vesuvius buried Pompeii in 79 AD, and suddenly every Roman within a hundred miles had a new reason to reconsider their real estate choices. The eruption didn’
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The Eruption of Mount Pelée in 1902
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May 8, 1902. Martinique. A Thursday morning that started with the usual Caribbean routines—fishermen hauling nets, merchants opening shops, children heading
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How to Use Our Interactive Volcano Map
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You’re staring at a screen full of red dots, triangles, and ominous-looking pins scattered across continents like some kind of planetary acne outbreak.
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The Tools Used to Monitor Volcanoes
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Somewhere beneath Iceland right now, magma is creeping through rock like toothpaste through a crack in the tube. Scientists know this because of instruments
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Ten Amazing Facts You Did Not Know About Volcanoes
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Lists promising “facts you didn’t know” are usually filled with things everyone already knows or things nobody cares about.
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How Satellites Watch Volcanoes from Space
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Mount Pinatubo erupted in June 1991, ejecting roughly 10 cubic kilometers of material into the atmosphere and cooling Earth’s surface by about 0.
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The Birds of Paradise near Papuan Volcanoes
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The Raggiana bird-of-paradise does something peculiar when Mount Bosavi rumbles. It keeps dancing. Not fleeing, not panicking—dancing. The males continue
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Ethical Volcano Tourism What to Know
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Mount Vesuvius killed roughly 2,000 people in 79 CE when it buried Pompeii under volcanic ash. Today, nearly three million tourists visit the site annually
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Volcanoes in the Bible and Other Holy Texts
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Mount Sinai erupted with fire, smoke, and trembling ground while Moses climbed up to meet God. At least that’s how Exodus 19 describes it—thunder
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Mount St Helens The Eruption That Changed Everything
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May 18, 1980. The mountain didn’t just erupt—it detonated sideways. Mount St. Helens blew 1,300 feet off its summit and sent a lateral blast screaming
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