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San Pedro is located in northern Chile, in the Ollagüe commune, El Loa Province, Antofagasta Region; [4] the border to Bolivia is 35 kilometres (22 mi) away. [5] The whole region is remote and thinly populated; [6] towns in the area include Ascotán, Cupo, Inacaliri and Paniri; [7] and the San Pedro railway station lies southwest of the volcano. [8]
Aerial photograph of the San Pedro Pellado composite volcano San Pedro de Tatara (aka San Pedro-Pellado) is a volcano in Chile. 36°00′S 71°50′W / 36.00°S 71.83°W / -36.00; -71.83 ( "San Pedro de
Volcán San Pedro (or Las Yeguas) is a 3,020-metre (9,908 ft) stratovolcano on the shores of Lago de Atitlán, in the Sololá Department of southern Guatemala. It is part of the mountain range of the Sierra Madre. At the base of the volcano is the village of San Pedro La Laguna.
The island’s capital, Plymouth, is now a modern-day ghost town covered in ash, and the Soufriere Hills volcano continues to erupt to this day. javarman3/istockphoto Socotra Island
Quality image of San Pedro volcano (left) and San Pablo volcano (right) in northern Chile. San Pedro is number 19 on Wikipedia's list of tallest volcanoes by elevation above sea level. It has two adjacent cones, the old and the new. The old cone was active over 100,000 years ago and the new cone's last large eruption was around 10,000 years ago ...
Now it’s waking up. Now it's finally building up to the next eruption.'" This image shows lava from the 2011 eruption at the Axial Seamount off the U.S. West Coast.
In 2010, the Eyjafjallajökull volcano erupted near glacial ice in Iceland, creating an ash cloud that then canceled roughly 100,000 flights. Experts don’t expect a similar outcome if Grindavik ...
Cerro Chao is a lava flow complex associated with the Cerro del León volcano in the Andes. It is the largest known Quaternary silicic volcano body and part of the most recent phase of activity in the Altiplano–Puna volcanic complex. Cerro Chao formed over the course of three eruptions preceded by a pyroclastic stage.