Skip to content
Category

Two-thousanders of North America

page 1
Parícutin
Parícutin (or Volcán de Parícutin, also accented Paricutín) is a cinder cone volcano located in the Mexican state of Michoacán, near the city of Uruapan and about west of Mexico City. The volcano surged suddenly from the cornfield of local farmer Dionisio Pulido in 1943, attracting both popular and scientific attention.
Pacaya
Pacaya is an active complex volcano in Guatemala, which first erupted approximately 23,000 years ago and has erupted at least 23 times since the Spanish conquest of Guatemala. It rises to an elevation of . After being dormant for over 70 years, it began erupting vigorously in 1961 and has been erupting frequently since then. Much of its activity is Strombolian, but occasionally Plinian eruptions also occur, sometimes showering the area of the nearby Departments with ash.
Poás Volcano
mountain in Costa Rica
San Miguel
volcano in El Salvador
Santa Ana Volcano
Volcano in the Department of Santa Ana, El Salvador.
Cerro El Pital
mountain in Central America, on the border of El Salvador and Honduras
Cerro Las Minas
mountain in Lempira Department, Honduras
San Vicente
stratovolcano in central El Salvador
Miravalles Volcano
mountain in Costa Rica
Cerro Mogotón
Mogotón is a mountain in the Reserva Nacional Cordillera Dipilto y Jalapa on the border of Nicaragua and Honduras; It rises above sea level and is the highest point in Nicaragua.
Barva Volcano
mountain
Ceboruco
Ceboruco is a dacitic stratovolcano located in Nayarit, Mexico, northwest of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt. The largest eruption, the Jala Plinian eruption, was around 930 AD ±200, VEI 6, releasing of tephra. The most recent and best documented eruption from Ceboruco lasted from 1870–1875, with fumarole activity lasting well into the 20th century. The mountain features one large caldera, created during the Jala eruption, with a smaller crater nested inside that formed when the Dos Equis lava dome collapsed during the Coapales eruption around 1100 AD. Within both of these craters,
Tequila Volcano
mountain
Platanar
mountain in Costa Rica
Cerro del Cubilete
mountain in Guanajuato, Mexico
Cerro Congo
volcano in Costa Rica
Cerro de las Mitras
mountain in Nuevo Leon, Mexico
Cerro Rabo de Mico
mountain in Costa Rica
Cerro del Judío
mountain in Magdalena Contreras, Mexico City, Mexico
Cerro El Huehuentón
mountain in Mexico
Volcán Cacho Negro
volcano in Costa Rica
Cerro Cedral
mountain in Costa Rica
Sangangüey
Sangangüey is an eroded stratovolcano standing 2340 meters tall in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt of Mexico. The volcano is located immediately southeast of Tepic in the state of Nayarit in Mexico. There has been no confirmed historical eruptions, and the volcano is believed to be dormant; although an indigenous legend recorded the volcano erupting in 1742. The eruption is believed to be one occurring on a flank cinder cone on the volcano. Within the last 300,000 years however, the volcano has produced 45 cinder cones and lava flows.
Pico de Teyra
mountain in Mexico
Sierra del Fraile
mountain in Nuevo Leon, Mexico