Available Weekly Reports
| Savai'i |

There are no activity reports for Savai'i.
Summary of eruption dates and Volcanic Explosivity Indices (VEI).
| Start Date | Stop Date | Eruption Certainty | VEI | Evidence | Activity Area or Unit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1905 Aug 4 | 1911 Nov | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | Matavanu (north flank 402 m) |
| 1902 Oct 30 | 1902 Nov 17 ± 4 days | Confirmed | 1 | Historical | Mata Ole Afi (1649 m) |
| 1760 | Unknown | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | Mauga Afi (west-central Toasivi ridge) |
| 1610 ± 200 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | Le'ele | |
| 1350 ± 50 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | Tafua Savai'i? | |
| 1310 ± 50 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | ||
| 1240 ± 30 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | ||
| 1040 ± 150 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | ||
| 170 ± 100 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | ||
| 480 BCE ± 300 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | ||
| 1150 BCE ± 150 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | ||
| 1990 BCE ± 150 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (corrected) | North flank (Maugaloa) |
Savai'i, the largest and highest of the Samoan islands, consists of a massive basaltic shield volcano constructed along a WNW-ESE-trending rift zone that splits into two rifts on the east side of the 75-km-long, oval-shaped island. Pliocene and Pleistocene shield formation was followed by stream and marine erosion, partial submergence, and growth of coral reefs. Late-stage Pleistocene and Holocene eruptions produced voluminous lava flows that partially buried fringing reefs. Numerous cinder cones and lava cones dot the broad crest of Savai'i, which has a low-angle, dome-like profile and reaches an elevation of 1858 m. Additional cones occur on the north-central flank, and a large number are found in the south-central part of the island. Three eruptions, including two in the 20th century, occurred in historical time, and produced voluminous lava flows that reached the northern coast along broad fronts up to about 15 km wide, destroying several villages and overtopping fringing reefs.