Available Weekly Reports
| Calbuco |

There are no activity reports for Calbuco.
Summary of eruption dates and Volcanic Explosivity Indices (VEI).
| Start Date | Stop Date | Eruption Certainty | VEI | Evidence | Activity Area or Unit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1972 Aug 26 | 1972 Aug 26 | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | |
| 1961 Feb 1 | 1961 Mar 26 (in or after) | Confirmed | 3 | Historical | |
| 1945 | Unknown | Confirmed | Historical | ||
| 1932 | Unknown | Confirmed | Historical | ||
| 1929 Jan 6 | 1929 Jan 6 | Confirmed | 3 | Historical | |
| 1917 Apr | 1917 May | Confirmed | 3 | Historical | |
| 1911 | 1912 | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | |
| 1909 Mar | Unknown | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | |
| 1907 Apr 22 | Unknown | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | |
| 1906 | Unknown | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | |
| 1894 Nov 16 | 1895 (?) | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | |
| 1893 Jan 7 | 1894 Jan 16 (in or after) | Confirmed | 2 | Historical | |
| [ |
[ |
Discredited | |||
| 1792 (?) | Unknown | Confirmed | Historical | ||
| 1600 ± 75 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 1380 ± 50 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 520 ± 200 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 220 ± 75 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 40 ± 75 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 100 BCE ± 100 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 330 BCE ± 200 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 1920 BCE ± 50 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 4300 BCE ± 150 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 5560 BCE ± 40 years | Unknown | Confirmed | Radiocarbon (uncorrected) | ||
| 6050 BCE (?) | Unknown | Confirmed | Tephrochronology |
Along with its neighbor Osorno, Calbuco is one of the most active volcanoes of the southern Chilean Andes. The isolated late-Pleistocene to Holocene andesitic volcano rises to 2003 m south of Lake Llanquihué in the Chilean lake district. Guanahuca, Guenauca, Huanauca, and Huanaque, all listed as synonyms of Calbuco (Catalog of Active Volcanoes of the World), are actually synonyms of nearby Osorno volcano (Moreno 1985, pers. comm.). The 2003-m-high Calbuco is elongated in a SW-NE direction and is capped by a 400-500 m wide summit crater. The complex evolution of Calbuco included edifice collapse of an intermediate edifice during the late Pleistocene that produced a 3 cu km debris avalanche that reached the lake. One of the largest historical eruptions in southern Chile took place from Calbuco in 1893-1894 and concluded with lava dome emplacement. Subsequent eruptions have enlarged the lava-dome complex in the summit crater.