Soufrière Guadeloupe
The Caribbean's Most Controversial Volcanic Crisis
1,467 m
1977
Stratovolcano
France (Guadeloupe)
Location
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Volcanic Hazards & Risk Assessment
Primary Hazards
- Pyroclastic flows
- Lava flows
- Volcanic bombs and ballistics
- Lahars and mudflows
Risk Level
Geological Composition & Structure
Rock Types
Tectonic Setting
Age & Formation
Eruption Statistics & Analysis
| Metric | Value | Global Ranking | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Recorded Eruptions | Unknown | Low | Moderately active volcano |
| Maximum VEI | VEI Unknown | Minor | Local impact potential |
| Recent Activity | 49 years ago | Recent | Recently active |
Monitoring & Alert Status
Monitoring Networks
Current Status
Authority Sources
Interesting Facts
The 1976 evacuation displaced 73,600 people — approximately one-fifth of Guadeloupe's population — for up to several months, making it one of the largest volcanic evacuations in Caribbean history.
At 1,467 m (4,813 ft), Soufrière Guadeloupe is the highest point in the Lesser Antilles island chain.
All six historically observed eruptions (since 1690) have been phreatic — steam explosions without fresh magma reaching the surface — but the geological record proves the system is capable of VEI 4 magmatic eruptions.
The city of Basse-Terre, the administrative capital of Guadeloupe, sits just 3.5 km from the summit, making it one of the most volcanically exposed capital cities in the world.
The 1976 crisis divided the French scientific community so bitterly that the debate between volcanologists Claude Allègre and Haroun Tazieff became a public scandal covered in the national press.
Since 2018, monitoring stations have recorded increasing fumarolic temperatures, gas flux, and the emergence of new vents near the summit — trends being closely watched by the OVSG.
The word 'soufrière' (from French soufre, 'sulfur') is used to name at least four different Caribbean volcanoes, reflecting the ubiquity of sulfurous fumaroles across the Lesser Antilles arc.
Two catastrophic flank collapses in the past 12,000 years generated debris avalanches that swept down to the coast, fundamentally reshaping the volcano's structure.
The geological record reveals that the most recent VEI 4 magmatic eruption (~1530 CE) occurred just 160 years before the first European observation of the volcano in 1690.
Guadeloupe National Park, which protects the volcano and its surrounding tropical montane forest, is one of the most visited national parks in France's overseas territories.
Soufrière Guadeloupe sits 170 km north of Mount Pelée on Martinique, whose 1902 eruption killed approximately 29,000 people — a catastrophe that weighs heavily on Caribbean volcanic risk planning.
The natural hot springs at Bains Jaunes ('Yellow Baths'), on the hiking trail to the summit, have been used for bathing since the colonial era and remain a popular stop for visitors.