Taal, Philippines

Location: 14.0N, 121.0E
Elevation: 1,310 feet  (400 m)

Space Shuttle  photo STS045-152-274 taken in March 1992 and looking east across south Luzon and  Taal volcano. Taal is only 30 miles (50  kilometers) south of Manila on the island of Luzon in the Philippines. The black  area in the center of the image is Taal Lake, which nearly fills the  18-mile-diameter (30-kilometer) caldera.

Taal Lake, January 1987.  Photograph copyrighted and provided by Steve  O'Meara of Volcano Watch International.. Main crater lake on Volcano  Island in Taal Lake, January 1987. Photograph copyrighted and provides by Steve  O'Meara of Volcano Watch International.

Since 1572, Taal  has erupted at least 34 times. The most recent large eruption (VEI=4) was it  September 1965. The eruption began with the ejection of basaltic spatter. This was followed by the main phreatic eruption that opened a new crater on the southwest side of Volcano Island. Ash  was ejected from the vent to heights as great as 12 miles (20 km). Photograph by  J.G. Moore, U.S. Geological Survey, September, 1965.

A flat, turbulent  cloud of material spread laterally away from the volcano. Called a base surge,  this cloud move at hurricane velocity and was made of ash, mud, lapilli, and  blocks. This photo shows the effect of the base surge on palm trees about  2.5 miles (4 km) from Taal. Photograph by J.G. Moore, U.S. Geological Survey,  September, 1965.

The 1965 eruption  formed a new crater about 1 mile (1.5 km) long and 1,000 feet (300 m) wide. A  cinder cone and lake formed in the new vent. Photograph by J.G. Moore, U.S.  Geological Survey, September, 1965.

Cloud from a small  explosion during the waning stage of the eruption. Photograph by J.G. Moore,  U.S. Geological Survey, September, 1965.

Since early 1991, the volcano has been restless, with swarms of earthquakes,  new steaming areas, ground fracturing, and increases in water temperature of the  lake. Volcanologists and other local authorities are carefully monitoring Taal  to understand if the current activity may foretell an eruption. Taal is one of  15 "Decade Volcanoes" that have been identified by the volcanology community as  presenting large potential hazards to population centers.

Sources of Information:

Defant, M.J., Jacques, D., Maury, R.C., de Boer, J., and Joron, J-L., 1989,  Geochemistry and tectonic setting of the Luzon arc, Philippines: Geological  Society of America, v. 101, p. 663-672.

Moore, J.G., Nakamura, K., and Alcaraz, A., 1966, The September 28-30, 1965  eruption of Taal volcano, Philippines: Bulletin of Volcanology, v. 29, p. 75-76.

Santos, G.G., and Wainerdi, R.R., 1969. Notes on the 1965 Taal volcanic  eruptions: Bulletin of Volcanology, v. 33, p. 503-529.

Worcester, D.C., 1912, Taal volcano and its recent destructive eruption:  National geographic, v. 23, p. 313-368

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A view from Taal Lake to Volcano Island. What you see ist NOT Taal Volcano, it is Mt. Binitiang located northwest on Volcano Island.

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Visayan Sea, Cebu, Philippines,

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