Nevado del Tolima
Colombia's Glacier-Capped Sentinel
5,215 m
1943
Stratovolcano
Colombia
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 | 83 years ago | Historical | Recently active |
Monitoring & Alert Status
Monitoring Networks
Current Status
Authority Sources
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Other Volcanoes in Colombia
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Stratovolcano(es)
- Nevado del Ruiz
Stratovolcano
Interesting Facts
Nevado del Tolima rises to 5,215 m (17,110 ft), making it one of the highest active volcanoes in Colombia and in the entire Northern Andean Volcanic Arc.
The volcano produced a VEI 5 Plinian eruption approximately 3,600 years ago — comparable in scale to the 79 AD eruption of Vesuvius.
Tolima's glaciers have lost an estimated 90% of their coverage since the Little Ice Age, and may disappear entirely within decades due to climate change.
The volcano lies just 30 km south of Nevado del Ruiz, whose 1985 eruption generated lahars that killed over 23,000 people in Armero.
A funnel-shaped summit crater, 200-300 m deep, caps the steep-sided cone at the highest point of the edifice.
Tolima has produced 12 recorded eruptions spanning approximately 10,000 years, with activity ranging from VEI 2 minor events to VEI 5 Plinian catastrophes.
The volcano's younger cone formed during the past 40,000 years, built atop a 3-km-wide late-Pleistocene caldera.
Los Nevados National Natural Park, which encompasses Tolima, protects the rare tropical paramo ecosystem — alpine grassland found only in the northern Andes.
The city of Ibague (population ~580,000), capital of Tolima Department, lies approximately 30 km southeast and could be affected by lahars in a major eruption.
Three eruptions occurred in rapid succession between 1822 and 1826, the most active historical period at this volcano.
Lava dome growth has produced block-and-ash flows that traveled primarily to the northeast and southeast in past eruptions.
The summit climb is a 3-5-day mountaineering expedition requiring glacier travel with crampons and ice axes.