🌋VolcanoAtlas

Fernandina

The Most Active Volcano in the Galápagos

Elevation

1,476 m

Last Eruption

2024

Type

Shield volcano

Country

Ecuador

Location

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Volcanic Hazards & Risk Assessment

Primary Hazards

  • Lava flows and fountaining
  • Volcanic gas emissions
  • Local explosive activity

Risk Level

Population at RiskLow
Infrastructure RiskHigh
Aviation RiskSignificant

Geological Composition & Structure

Rock Types

Primary
Unknown
Silica Content
Varied composition

Tectonic Setting

Unknown
Intraplate setting with hotspot or regional volcanic activity.

Age & Formation

Epoch
Unknown
Evidence
Unknown

Eruption Statistics & Analysis

MetricValueGlobal RankingSignificance
Total Recorded EruptionsUnknownLowModerately active volcano
Maximum VEIVEI UnknownMinorLocal impact potential
Recent Activity2 years agoVery RecentCurrently active

Monitoring & Alert Status

Monitoring Networks

Global Volcanism Program
International eruption database

Current Status

Active
Recent volcanic activity detected. Continuous monitoring in place.

Other Volcanoes in Ecuador

Interesting Facts

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Fernandina is the most active volcano in the Galápagos Islands, with 33 recorded eruptions — more than any other island in the archipelago.

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The 1968 caldera collapse dropped the caldera floor approximately 350 m in a single event, swallowing a pre-existing caldera lake — the most powerful explosive eruption ever documented in the Galápagos.

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Fernandina Island has never been colonized by invasive species, making it one of the most pristine volcanic islands on Earth.

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The 1988 eruption caused the collapse of nearly 1 km³ of the east caldera wall, generating a massive debris avalanche that covered the caldera floor.

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Fernandina's summit caldera is 5 × 6.5 km and approximately 900 m deep — one of the deepest calderas relative to volcano height of any shield volcano on Earth.

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The island is home to the flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi), which exists nowhere else on the planet and has evolved in response to the island's unique volcanic ecology.

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In 2019, a living Fernandina giant tortoise (Chelonoidis phantasticus) was rediscovered on the island after being considered potentially extinct for over a century.

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Captain Benjamin Morrell, who witnessed the 1825 eruption, claimed the sea around Fernandina boiled so intensely that pitch melted on his ship — an account modern volcanologists consider greatly exaggerated.

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Fernandina lies directly above the Galápagos mantle plume, the hotspot that has built the entire island chain over at least 20 million years.

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The volcano erupts exclusively basaltic lava — highly fluid flows that can travel from the summit to the coast, a distance of over 10 km.

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Fernandina's eruption frequency — roughly one event every 3–4 years in recent decades — rivals that of Kīlauea in Hawaii.

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The Bolívar Channel between Fernandina and Isabela is one of the richest marine environments in the Galápagos due to cold-water upwelling.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Fernandina volcano active?
Yes, Fernandina is the most active volcano in the Galápagos Islands and one of the most active shield volcanoes on Earth. It has erupted 33 times in its recorded history, with the most recent eruption occurring in March 2024. The volcano has averaged one eruption every 3–4 years in recent decades, and volcanologists consider another eruption in the near future to be virtually certain. It is monitored by Ecuador's Instituto Geofísico primarily through satellite remote sensing.
When did Fernandina last erupt?
Fernandina's most recent eruption occurred on March 2, 2024, producing lava flows from the SE flank (VEI 1). Prior to that, the volcano erupted in January 2020, June 2018, and September 2017. This cluster of four eruptions in seven years is consistent with the volcano's long-term pattern of high-frequency effusive activity, punctuated occasionally by larger events like the catastrophic 1968 caldera collapse.
What happened during the 1968 Fernandina eruption?
The 1968 eruption was the most powerful explosive event ever recorded in the Galápagos. It began on May 21 with a flank eruption, then escalated on June 11 when a major explosive eruption from the west caldera wall caused the caldera floor to collapse approximately 350 m, swallowing a pre-existing lake. Rated VEI 4, it generated a massive debris avalanche within the caldera and deposited ash across the archipelago. The event fundamentally reshaped the caldera's internal geometry.
Can you visit Fernandina Island?
Access to Fernandina is highly restricted. Visitors can land at Punta Espinoza on the northeastern tip as part of regulated Galápagos cruise itineraries. This site offers exceptional wildlife viewing, including marine iguanas, flightless cormorants, and Galápagos penguins at close range. All visits require licensed Galápagos National Park guides. Hiking beyond the designated visitor area and summit visits are not permitted for tourists.
Why is Fernandina so volcanically active?
Fernandina is the Galápagos island closest to the underlying mantle plume (hotspot) that has built the entire archipelago. This proximity to the magma source provides a sustained, high-rate supply of basaltic melt to the volcano's plumbing system. The thin oceanic crust (less than 15 km) beneath the island offers little resistance to rising magma, allowing frequent eruptions. The same hotspot mechanism is responsible for building the Hawaiian Islands, and Fernandina's eruption rate is comparable to Kīlauea's.
What type of volcano is Fernandina?
Fernandina is a basaltic shield volcano — a broad, gently sloping volcanic edifice built primarily from highly fluid lava flows. It displays the classic Galápagos 'overturned soup bowl' profile: a wide base with steeper upper flanks and a large summit caldera (5 × 6.5 km). The volcano erupts exclusively basaltic to picro-basaltic magma, typical of hotspot volcanism on oceanic crust, and most eruptions are effusive rather than explosive.
How tall is Fernandina?
Fernandina rises to 1,476 m (4,843 ft) above sea level. While not the tallest Galápagos volcano (Wolf on Isabela reaches 1,710 m), Fernandina is the most voluminous and most active. The summit caldera is approximately 900 m deep, meaning the actual caldera rim stands at about 1,476 m while the floor lies at roughly 576 m — a dramatic drop visible from the rim.
Are there any people living on Fernandina Island?
No, Fernandina Island is completely uninhabited and has never had permanent human residents. The island lies within a restricted zone of the Galápagos National Park and is visited only by authorized scientific expeditions and strictly regulated tourist groups landing at Punta Espinoza. Remarkably, Fernandina is also free of all introduced species — no rats, goats, cats, or other invasive animals have established populations, making it the most pristine major island in the Galápagos.