Kanlaon Volcano - Negros Island, Philippines
This 24/7 live camera is positioned in Mansalanao, 8.2 kilometres south-west of the summit, looking directly up the southern flank of Kanlaon Volcano on Negros Island in the central Philippines. Kanlaon is a stratovolcano standing 2,465 metres above sea level, making it the highest peak in the Visayas region and one of the 24 active volcanoes in the Philippine archipelago monitored continuously by the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology. The faint glow and gas emission visible at the summit in this pre-dawn capture is consistent with the volcano's baseline activity, which regularly includes phreatic explosions driven by superheated groundwater flashing to steam on contact with the magmatic system below.
Kanlaon has erupted over 30 times since records began in 1866, with eruptions typically producing ash columns rising 1,000 to 5,000 metres above the crater and causing ashfall across communities on both the Negros Occidental and Negros Oriental sides of the island. The volcano sits within Mount Kanlaon Natural Park, a protected area covering 24,557 hectares of montane forest that serves as one of the last refuges for endemic Visayan wildlife including the Visayan warty pig and the writhed hornbill, both critically endangered species found nowhere else on earth. The park was designated a ASEAN Heritage Park in 1984 in recognition of its biodiversity significance across the region.
Negros Island has a total population of approximately 4.4 million people across its two provinces, Negros Occidental and Negros Oriental, with several communities within the volcano's declared permanent danger zone of 4 kilometres from the summit. The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology maintains alert levels for Kanlaon ranging from Level 0 to Level 5, and the volcano has spent extended periods at Level 2 in recent years, indicating increased volcanic unrest and restricting entry into the 4-kilometre danger zone. Live visual monitoring feeds like this camera provide real-time observation that complements seismic and gas measurement instruments on the ground.
Did You Know? Kanlaon's eruptions are frequently phreatic, meaning they are driven entirely by steam rather than fresh magma, making them particularly difficult to predict as they can occur with little or no seismic warning.
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location_on Mansalanao, Negros Occidental, Philippines