Almolonga

Google Earth Placemark
  • Country
  • Subregion Name
  • Volcano Type
  • Last Known Eruption
  • 3197 m
    10486 ft
  • 14.820°
  • -91.480°
  • Elevation
  •  
  • Latitude
  • Longitude

There are no activity reports for Almolonga.



 Available Weekly Reports


There are no Weekly Reports available for Almolonga.

Summary of eruption dates and Volcanic Explosivity Indices (VEI).

Start Date Stop Date Eruption Certainty VEI Evidence Activity Area or Unit
[ 1891 ] [ Unknown ] Discredited    
[ 1823 ] [ Unknown ] Discredited    
1818 Jan 16 1818 Jun 19 (in or after) Confirmed 2 Historical East flank of Cerro Quemado
[ 1785 ] [ Unknown ] Discredited    
1765 Oct 24 1765 Oct 25 Confirmed 2 Historical Cerro Quemado
800 ± 50 years Unknown Confirmed 3 Radiocarbon (corrected) Cerro Quemado

Volcán de Almolonga is an andesitic stratovolcano with a 3.3-km-wide late-Pleistocene central caldera that is located along the Zunil fault zone. The caldera is surrounded by a ring-dike configuration of dacitic and rhyolitic lava domes. The youngest and only historically active dome complex is Cerro Quemado (whose name means Burned Peak), located immediately south of Guatemala's second largest city, Quezaltenango. About 1200 radiocarbon years ago, part of the andesitic-to-dacitic Cerro Quemado dome collapsed, producing a debris avalanche and an associated lateral explosion that swept across the valley to the west as far as the flanks of Siete Orejas volcano. The latest eruption in 1818 produced a blocky 2.5-km-long lava flow. Hot springs are located on the northern and eastern flanks of Cerro Quemado, and the Zuníl geothermal field, the site of a geothermal exploration project, lies on the SE flank of Cerro Quemado.