I love volcanoes. I love to look at them, I love to hike them, I love to peer into them. The map below shows the location of most of the volcanoes I have seen. Click on a marker to see its name; then click on its name in the list below to learn more about it.
For those volcanoes which I did not have photographs, I used whatever I could find on Wikipedia (itv turns out this is quite legal).
My definition of volcano is quite liberal: If the site was a volcano in the past, I include it, even if it no longer has all the trappings. Example: Crater Lake.
This top map shows all of the volcanoes I have climbed, but its scale necessarily obscures some of the their numbers. The next three maps show enlarged sections to show the numbers better. Even then, some of the numbers are still obscured. Life is tough...
Click on a volcano's name to see its pictures.
Agung Bali, Indonesia) 2. Ambrym (Vanuatu) 3. Arenal (Costa Rica) 4. Aso (Japan) 5. Cerro Quemado (Guatemala) 6. Chachani (Peru) 7. Chicabal (Guatemala) 8. Chimborazo (Ecuador) 9. Cotopaxi (Ecuador) 10. Crater Lake (Oregon) 11. Etna (Sicily) 12. Fuji (Japan) 13. Haleakala (Maui, Hawaii) 14. Iguaque (Colombia) 15. Irazu (Costa Rica) 16. Kenya (East Africa) 17. Kilauea (Hawaii) 18. Kilimanjaro (Tanzania) 19. La Grande Soufrière (Guadeloupe) 20. Laguna Cuicocha (Ecuador) 21. Laguna Cuilotoa (Ecuador) 22. Lassen (California) 23. Mauna Kea (Hawaii) 24. Ngurdoto Crater (Tanzania) 25. Nyiragongo (The Democratic Republic of the Congo) 26. Pacaya (Guatemala) 27. Rainier (Washington) 28. Rucu Pichincha (Ecuador) 29. Santa Maria (Guatemala) 30. Santa Maria (Washington) 31. Shasta (California) 32. Stromboli (Aeolian Islands, Italy 33. Tajumulco (Guatemala) 34. Telica (Guatemala) 35. Tongariro (New Zealand) 36. Vesuvius (Italy) 37. Yasur (Tanna Island, Vanuatu)