Contact | RSS | EN | DE | EL | ES | FR | IT | RU

Volcans au Japon (275)

Japan has over 100 active volcanoes, more than almost any other country and accounts alone for about 10 % of all active volcanoes in the world. The volcanoes belong to the Pacific Ring of Fire, caused by subduction zones of the Pacific plate beneath continental and other oceanic plates along its margins.
Japan's volcanic arcs and tectonic setting
Japan is located at the junction of 4 tectonic plates - the Pacific, Philippine, Eurasian and North American plates, and its volcanoes are mainly located on 5 subduction-zone related volcanic arcs where the Pacific Plate descends under the North American Plate along the Kuril Trench and the Japan Trench and underneath the Philippine Sea Plate along the Izu-Bonin Trench. The Philippine Plate itself subducts beneath the Eurasian Plate at the western end, forming the Ryukyu Trench. The principal resulting volcanic ars are:
- Ryukyu Arc and Southwest Honshu Arcs in the south (Philippine plate subducting beneath between the Eurasian Plate),
- Izu-Bonin-Mariana Arc (subduction of Pacific plate beneath Philippine plate)
- Northeast Honshu and Kurile Arc in the north (subduction of Pacific plate beneath the N-American plate)
(more info: www.glgarcs.net/intro/subduction.html)

Besides intense volcanic activity, Japan is one of the places in the world most affected by frequent, and sometimes devastatingly large earthquakes. Its oceanic setting makes it vulnerable for tsunamis as well, as the tragedy of the 11 March 2011 8.9 earthquake and tsunami terrifyingly illustrated.

Record in historically documented eruptions
Japan's first documented historical eruption was from Aso volcano in 553 AD , the year after Buddhism was introduced from Korea. It holds a record in the number of historically documented eruptions.
Japan's largest historical eruption (Towada, 915 AD), 17 Japanese volcanoes had been documented in eruption, more than the rest of the world combined (including 10 in Europe).

Ata caldera

Hokkaido (52 volcans)

Akaigawa | Akan | Birao | Chubetsu | Daisetsu | E-san | E-san Maru-yama | Hakodate-yama | Horohoro-Tokushumbetsu | Kariba | Komaga-take | Kumaneshiri | Kutcharo | Kuttara | Mashu | Musa | Nigorigawa | Nipesotsu-Maruyama | Niseikaushuppe | Niseko | Okushiri-Katsuma-yama | Onnebetsu | Orofure-Raiba | Oshima Maru-yama | Oshima-Ko-jima | Oshima-Oshima | Raiden | Rausu | Rishiri | Samakkenupuri | Sapporo | Shari | Shiitokoro | Shikaribetsu | Shikaribetsu Group | Shikotsu | Shiretoko | Shiretoko-Iozan | Shiribetsu | Soranuma | Tenchozan | Tengu-Hirayama | Tokachi | Tokachi-Eboshi | Tokachi-Mitsumata | Tomuraushi Volcanic Group | Unabetsu | Usu | Washibetsu | Yokotsu | Yotei | Zenikame

Honshu (140 volcans)

Abu | Adachi | Adatara | Aizu Nunobiki | Akagi | Akita-Komagatake | Akita-Yake-yama | Aonoyama | Aoso | Asakusa | Asama | Ashitaka | Ayame-daira | Azuma | Azumayasan | Bandai | Bishamon-dake | Chojagahara | Chokai | Daikon-jima | Dainichi-yama | Dainichiga-take | Daira-Komaga-take | Daisen | Daito | Daruma | Dorobu | Eboshi | Eboshi-Washigatake | Funagata | Futamata | Gankyoji | Ganto-Kamuro | Gassan | Hachimantai | Hakkoda | Hakone | Haku-san | Hanamagari | Haruna | Hijiori | Hiuchi | Hodakadake | Hotaka | Iiji | Iizuna | Iwaki | Iwate | Izu-Tobu | Jaishi | Kaminoroka | Kamitakara | Kannabe | Kanpu | Kayo | Kenashi | Kinunuma-Nenakusa | Kirigamine | Kita Yatsugatake | Kobinai | Komochi-Onoko | Kurikoma | Kurofuji | Kurohime | Kusatsu-Shirane | Kyoga-take | Madarao | Masugata | Megata | Midagahara | Minakami | Momisawa-dake | Moriyoshi | Motodori | Mt Fuji | Mukaimachi | Mutsu-Hiuchi-dake | Mutsure-jima | Myoko | Naeba | Nanashigure | Nantai | Nanzaki | Narugo | Nasu | Nekoma | Niigata-Yake-yama | Nikko-Shirane | Norikura | Noro | Numanokami | Numazawa | Nyoho-Akanagi | Nyuto-Takakura | Oetaka-yama | Ogino-Sen | Oki-Dogo | Okiura | Omanago | Omeshi-dake | Onikobe | Ontake-san | Osore-yama | Ryohaku Maru-yama | Sanbe | Sekita | Sengoku | Shiga | Shikuma | Shirataka | Shirouma-Oike | Sukai-Kesemaru | Sumon | Sunagohara | Taga | Takahara | Takamatsu | Takara | Takayashiro | Tamagawa | Tanaba | Tashiro | Tazawa | Tenshi | Tokuyama-Mitake | Tomuro | Torikabuto | Towada | Tsuruta | Ueno | Usami | Utsukushigahara | Washiba-Kumonotaira | Yake-dake | Yakeishi | Yatsugatake | Yokote | Yuga-mine | Yugawara | Zao

Izu Islands (21 volcans)

Aoga-shima | Doyo | Hachijo-jima | Inamba-jima | Kozushima | Kurose Hole | Mikura Seamount | Mikura-jima | Miyake-shima | Mokuyo | Myojin Knoll | Myojinsho | Nii-jima | Onoharajima | Oshima | Sofugan | Suiyo | Sumisujima | To-shima | Tori-shima | Udonejima

Kyushu (26 volcans)

Aso | Ata caldera | Fukue | Futago | Hane-yama | Hime-shima Volcanic Group | Hohi | Hokusatsu | Ibusuku | Iki Volcanic Group | Imuta | Kakuto | Kinpo | Kirishima | Kuju | Kurose | Ojikajima | Sakurajima | Satsuma Maru-yama | Sendai | Sone | Sumiyoshi-ike | Taradake | Tsurumi | Unzen | Yabakei

Îles Ryūkyū (14 volcans)

Akuseki-jima | Gajajima | Io-Torishima | Iriomote-jima | Kikai | Kobi-sho | Kogaja-jima | Kuchinoerabu-jima | Kuchinoshima | Kuroshima | Nakano-shima | Suwanose-jima | Tokara Hirase | Yokoate-jima

Volcano Islands (19 volcans)

Daikoku | Fukujin | Fukutoku-Okanoba | Getsuyo Seamount | Iwo-jima | Kaikata | Kaitoku | Kasuga | Kayo Seamount | Kinyo Seamount | Kita-Fukutokutai | Kita-Ioto | Minami Kasuga | Minami-Hiyoshi | Nichiyo Seamount | Nikko | Nishino-shima | NW Eifuku | unnamed
[plus petit] [plus gros]

Volcano list

Ata caldera

(caldera 924 m / 3031 ft)
Ata is one of the major active caldera systems of Kyushu, located south of the Kagoshima Bay. It had a massive "super-volcano"-style eruption 40,000 years ago, and contains the active Ibusuki volcanic field as well as famous Kaimondake stratovolcano towering above the southern ti... [plus d'info]

Useful Links:

News & updates
mer., 15 mai 2024, 14:00

Suwanosejima volcano (Ryukyu Islands, Japan) - Smithsonian / USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report for 8 May-14 May 2024 (Continuing Activity)

JMA reported that eruptive activity at Suwanosejima's Ontake Crater continued during 6-13 May. Crater incandescence was observed nightly in webcam images. An explosion was recorded at 2145 on 8 May though details of plumes were unknown. ... Read all
mer., 15 mai 2024, 14:00

Aira volcano (Kyushu, Japan) - Smithsonian / USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report for 8 May-14 May 2024 (Continuing Activity)

JMA reported ongoing eruptive activity at Minamidake Crater (Aira Caldera's Sakurajima volcano) during 6-13 May with nighttime crater incandescence. Very small eruptive events were recorded. Sulfur dioxide emissions were high, averaging 2,000 tons per day on 7 May. ... Read all
Map of volcanoes in Japan (USGS)
Map of volcanoes in Japan (USGS)
Why is there advertising on this site?
Copyright: VolcanoDiscovery ou autres sources indiquées.
Utilisation des documents: Les textes, les images et les vidéos de ce site internet sont protégées par copyright. Toute reproduction et tout usage sans accord préalable ne sont pas autorisés. Si vous désirez acquérir pour certains documents (photos, vidéos, textes ou autres) le droit de reproduction, d'édition et, plus généralement, de toute utilisation destinée à un usage public, qu'elle soit commerciale ou pas, vous êtes priés de nous contacter.
Volcanoes & Earthquakes
VolcanoDiscovery Home
Volcans | Séismes | Photos | Actualités | App
Adventure & Study Travel
Tours to Volcanoes and Volcanic Areas: walking tours, photo tours, study tours
Voyages |
Get our newsletter!
Company info
Contact | Mentions légales | Terms & conditions
Follow us
Follow us on facebook Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Twitter Visit our Youtube channel
EN | DE | EL | ES | FR | IT | RU
VolcanoDiscovery GmbH, Germany, Reg. nr.: HRB 103744, EU Tax Id: DE 297 465 123 owned and created by
Dr. Tom Pfeiffer, volcanologist, volcano photographer, tour organizer member of
IAVCEI
IAVCEI
Vulkanologische Gesellschaft
Volcanological Society
Ecotourism Greece
Ecotourism Greece
RUV insurance
Insured by R+V
VolcanoDiscovery © 2004- All Rights Reserved | Privacy - Changer Préférences
Cookie-free, privacy-friendly web stats