
The oldest active volcano: Mount Etna is Europe’s star volcano and the world’s oldest active volcano at 360,000 years young!
The most active volcano: Kilauea, a shield volcano in the Hawaiian Islands, is the most currently active volcano and is in an almost permanent state of eruption.
The country with most volcanoes: Indonesia boasts over 76 volcanoes, making it the most volcanic country in the world.
The country that has had the most eruptions: With more than 165 eruptions to its name, Japan is by far the country that has seen the most number of eruptions.
The city with most volcanoes: Auckland, New Zealand has 49 volcanoes, none of them active.
The most destructive: Mount Tambora and Mount Toba in Indonesia can both claim this title, depending on how you judge it. In terms of people killed, Tambora is by far the most destructive at 96,000 people killed. But in terms of damage to the planet and the threat to the human population as a whole, Lake Toba claims the title. When Lake Toba, a super volcano erupted around 74,000 years ago, it created a climatic catastrophe that resulted in crops and marine being wiped out around the world, the formation of a mini Ice Age – all of which very nearly wiped out the whole human population at the time. It is estimated that on the fateful day the Toba erupted, there were around 60,000 people living on the Earth. By the time the eruption, and the effects of the eruption had run their course, less than 4500 people remained in total!
The volcano that poses the biggest potential threat to people today: The Yellowstone Caldera probably poses the greatest threat to the world today. A supervolcano, Yellowstone has the potential for replicating the type of threat that Lake Toba presented when that erupted.
The most well know eruption in history: There are two equal contenders for this title. The first is Mount Vesuvius which erupted in AD 79 and buried the towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum in the process. The other is Krakatoa in Indonesia. When this volcano erupted it killed over 36,000 people – making it the third most deadly eruption after Mount Tamboa and Mount Pelee (40,000 killed).
News Report: 747 descends 14,000 feet after volcanic material shuts down engines