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Best Tuff Cone

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Best 1 Lake Toba (Sumatra) tuff features

Lake Toba’s tuff cone represents a massive volcanic eruption during the Pleistocene epoch. The resulting deposit, composed of fine-grained volcanic ash and rock fragments, forms a large caldera within Sumatra, Indonesia. This geological feature is notable for its immense scale—one of the largest kno...

2 Hunga Tonga

Hunga Tonga is a tuff-cone volcanic island situated within the Southwest Pacific Ocean near Tonga. It’s notable for its formation following a significant eruption in 2014-2015 and subsequent partial merger with Hunga Ha'apai. The cone represents a remnant of that activity, providing valuable insight...

3 Diamond Head (Lēahi)

Diamond Head (Lēahi) is a prominent tuff cone located on Oahu, Hawaii. Formed during the Pleistocene epoch approximately 300,000 years ago, it represents a significant example of volcanic landform development. The site’s unique geological history and dramatic landscape make it a notable destination...

4 Seongsan Ilchulbong (Sunrise Peak)

Seongsan Ilchulbong, also known as Sunrise Peak, is a tuff cone located on Jeju Island, South Korea. Formed during the Pleistocene epoch, it represents a unique geological feature—a ring-shaped volcanic deposit created by explosive eruptions of pyroclastic material. Designated a UNESCO World Heritag...

5 Pinnacle Rock, Bartolomé Island

Pinnacle Rock is a Pleistocene-formed tuff cone found on Bartolomé Island, part of Ecuador’s Galapagos Marine Park. The rock’s dramatic, sheer cliffs provide exceptional vantage points for observing marine life and the surrounding landscape. It's a significant geological feature studied by volcanolo...

6 Hunga Ha'apai

Hunga Ha’apai is a tuff-cone island situated within the southwest Pacific Ocean near Tonga. It formed as a remnant of a Holocene volcanic event. The island experienced significant destruction alongside Hunga Tonga due to the devastating 2022 eruption. Geologists and volcanologists study its formatio...

7 Tambora maar features

Tambora maar is a volcanic crater formed during the cataclysmic 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora on Sumbawa Island, Indonesia. The resulting caldera, characterized by tuff-cones and tuff rings, represents the largest volcanic event ever recorded. This geological feature provides valuable insight into...

8 Ijen maar (East Java)

Ijen Maar is an active tuff-cone volcano located in East Java, Indonesia. This remarkable geological site features a large, acid-maar lake formed within its caldera. The lake’s extreme acidity, due to volcanic gases and mineral reactions, makes it one of the most corrosive bodies of water on Earth....

9 Surtsey
Surtsey

Surtsey is a young, tuff-cone volcanic island formed off Iceland’s southern coast during the Holocene epoch. Its emergence in 1963 created a unique research reserve offering scientists an unparalleled opportunity to study ecological succession and geological processes in a newly formed environment....

10 Caldeira das Sete Cidades

The Caldeira das Sete Cidades is a large tuff-cone crater located on São Miguel Island in the Azores archipelago. Formed during the Pleistocene epoch through volcanic activity, it features a maar-caldera structure containing two distinct lakes—one blue and one green—resulting from varying mineral co...

11 Mývatn tuff cones (various)

Mývatn tuff cones are volcanic formations found within the Mývatn Nature Reserve in northern Iceland. These cones represent remnants of Holocene-era eruptions—specifically subglacial and phreatomagmatic events—that built up layers of hardened ash and rock known as tuff. Their unique conical shape cr...

12 Hanauma Bay

Hanauma Bay is a tuff cone on Oahu's southeastern coast whose breached crater forms a protected marine embayment designated a nature preserve in 1967.

13 Molokini
Molokini

Molokini is a partially eroded tuff cone islet off Maui, Hawaii, whose crescent-shaped rim encloses a shallow marine sanctuary popular for snorkeling and diving.

14 Vulcan Island (Taal Lake)

Vulcan Island is a prominent tuff cone within Taal Lake on Luzon in the Philippines, famous for hosting the main crater of Taal Volcano.

15 Laacher See

Laacher See is a volcanic caldera lake in Germany that was formed by a massive Plinian eruption approximately 13,000 years ago, which deposited ash across much of Northern Europe.

16 Rinjani maar (Segara Anak)

Mount Rinjani on Lombok, Indonesia, contains the Segara Anak crater lake, a notable volcanic feature formed during a massive eruption in the 13th century.

17 Fort Rock
Fort Rock

Fort Rock is a prominent crescent-shaped tuff cone in Lake County, Oregon, USA, originally formed by volcanic explosions beneath an ancient lake.

18 Pantelleria Specchio di Venere maar

The Specchio di Venere is a shallow crater lake in Pantelleria, Italy, notable for occupying a volcanic maar that features thermal mud pools and unique microbialite formations.

19 Batur maar features (Bali)

Situated in Bali, Indonesia, Mount Batur features a prominent caldera and crater lake formed by a massive volcanic eruption approximately 20,000 years ago.

20 Vestmannaeyjar (Heimaey) tuff features

Heimaey in Iceland's Vestmannaeyjar archipelago features coastal tuff formations shaped by glacial eruptions, notably expanded by the dramatic 1973 Eldfell volcanic crisis.

21 Capelinhos
Capelinhos

Capelinhos is a volcanic tuff cone on Faial Island in Portugal's Azores archipelago, formed during a submarine eruption from 1957 to 1958.

22 Koko Head
Koko Head

Koko Head is a tuff cone on southeastern Oahu, Hawaii, rising 642 feet above sea level and popular for its demanding stair-trail hike up a former wartime tramway.

23 Cinder Cone (Galapagos, Sullivan Bay area)

The Cinder Cone in the Galápagos Islands' Sullivan Bay area is notable for the extensive pahoehoe lava flows it produced during a volcanic eruption at the turn of the 20th century.

24 Budj Bim (Mount Eccles)

Budj Bim is an extinct volcano and tuff cone in Victoria, Australia, recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site for its ancient Aboriginal channels.

25 Kelud maar (East Java)

Kelud is a highly active volcanic crater in East Java, Indonesia, renowned for its devastating eruptions, including a major explosive event in 1919.

26 Deception Island tuff features

Deception Island in Antarctica is a flooded caldera with prominent tuff rings, notable for destructive eruptions in 1967 and 1969 that destroyed regional research stations.

27 Nishino-shima

Nishino-shima is a volcanic island in Japan's Ogasawara archipelago, notable for a 2013 eruption that merged it with a newly formed tuff cone.

28 Tavurvur area tuff cones

The Tavurvur area in Papua New Guinea's Rabaul caldera features prominent tuff cones, notable for explosive eruptions, including the devastating 1994 event that destroyed Rabaul.

29 Ubehebe Crater (Death Valley)

Ubehebe Crater is a large volcanic maar in California's Death Valley National Park, created by a phreatomagmatic explosion between 2,000 and 8,000 years ago.

30 Monte Epomeo (Ischia)

Monte Epomeo is the highest peak on Italy's island of Ischia, notable as a massive geological uplift primarily composed of Green Tuff deposited during an eruption 56,000 years ago.

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