Four of the volcanoes erupting on Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula are visible in one satellite image.
Published Apr 11, 2013Shiveluch and Klyuchevskaya volcanoes were busily puffing away in early January 2018.
Published Jan 17, 2018The peninsula has one of the highest concentrations of active volcanoes in the world.
Published Sep 25, 2014The remote Russian peninsula was covered in snow and unobscured by clouds.
Published Jan 19, 2017Several Kamchatkan Volcanoes, including Shiveluch, Kizimen, and one or both of Klyuchevskaya and Bezymianny show signs of activity.
Published Jul 13, 2012Karmsky, a volcano on the Kamchatka peninsula, regularly emits plumes of ash and volcanic gases.
Published Jan 21, 2015Autumn provides a colorful backdrop for the erupting Sheveluch volcano in this remarkably cloud-free view of Kamchatka taken on October 16.
Published Oct 20, 2011Most of Kamchatka’s volcanoes appear quiet in this snowy scene from December 2011.
Published Feb 26, 2012Ash from Zhupanovsky blew south over the Pacific Ocean in September 2014.
Published Sep 15, 2014Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula may be the fieriest place on Earth.
Published Apr 16, 2014A NASA satellite captured an image of a volcanic plume rising above the Russian volcano.
Published Apr 8, 2013Ash plumes stream from Shiveluch and Bezymianny Volcanoes on Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula.
Published Aug 4, 2011A distance of about 80 kilometers (50 miles) separates Shiveluch and Klyuchevskaya Volcanoes on Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula. Despite this distance, however, the two acted in unison on April 26, 2007.
Published May 11, 2007For the first time in nearly 250 years, the Kambalny Volcano ejected ash.
Published Mar 28, 2017A NASA satellite detected heat signatures from 3 of the 5 active volcanoes on the Russian Peninsula.
Published Jul 5, 2013Clouds hugged the east coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula while skies inland remained clear at the end of May 2009.
Published Jun 4, 2009