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The Jingbo volcanic field is in the Jingpo Lake region of Heilongjiang province [3] The Keluo volcanic field may have had historic eruptions [4] The Kunlun Volcanic Group last had an eruption on 27 May 1951, and consists of at least 70 pyroclastic cones [5] The Longgang volcanic field contains 150 scoria cones but only one of holocene age [6]
Relief map. Mount Baekdu is 2,744 m (9,003 ft) tall, making it the highest mountain in North Korea and Northeast China and the highest mountain of the Baekdu-daegan and Changbai mountain ranges. [13] Mount Baekdu is a stratovolcano whose cone is truncated by a significant caldera.
Xi Shan is the westernmost volcano with a diameter of 500 metres (1,600 ft) and a height of 25–30 metres (82–98 ft) [19] With a summit height of 5,104.6 metres (16,747 ft) and a height of 400 metres (1,300 ft) above base, Dahei Shan volcano is the highest volcano at Ashikule and features a V-shaped crater.
Tanzania – highest volcano outside South America; highest peak in Africa: Putana Volcano ... North Korea/China – highest mountain in Korean Peninsula: Cerro Machín:
This was one of the largest volcanic eruptions in recorded history. [43] There have been three eruptions in the Baitoushan volcano area in the last 400 years (1668, 1702, and 1903). [44] Ashi volcano of the Kunlun Volcanic Group in northwestern Tibet erupted in 1951 and is China's most recent eruption. [41] [45]
Elsewhere, the active volcano of Kilauea in Hawaii had been erupting almost constantly from its eastern rift zone since 1983. Then in April 2018, its 35-year-long eruption ended.
The 946 eruption of Paektu Mountain, a stratovolcano on the border of North Korea and China also known as Changbaishan, [1] occurred in late 946 CE. [2] [3] This event is known as the Millennium Eruption or Tianchi eruption. [4] It is one of the most powerful volcanic eruptions in recorded history; classified at least a VEI 6. [5] [6] [7]
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: KML; ... GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) Pages in category "Volcanoes of China"