New Answer Updated Jan 3, 2011:
1972-2010, 1963, 1957?-58, 1955, 1947, 1915, 1912.
Sourced from volcanolive.com/erebus.html
Truly, Mt Erebus has been erupting constantly -- with an orange glow in the winter sky -- since people have been visiting that part of Antarctica: 1899. The dates above are simply observationdates, not eruption dates.
Mount Erebus has been observed by scientists to be continuously active since 1972.
Early explorers observed it being continuously active between 1899 and 1922, the age of heroic polar exploration.
You can read more about its persistent eruption patterns, below.
Yes.
Since some eruptions have not been observed by mankind, there is no number available. It is clear, however, that it has constantly erupted since people have been there to observe it -- from 1899 onwards, with a few gaps when no people were in the vicinity.
Mt Erebus erupts fairly constantly, most of which have not been observed by mankind.
it is always spluttering out hot gas and lava
Mt Erebus is more or less permanently active, and could be considered the last volcano that erupted in Antarctica.
Mount Erebus erupted in 2008 and is still continuing to erupt.
When is it thought the first volcano in Australia erupted? When is it thought the first volcano in Australia erupted?
One volcano that erupted in 1815 is Mount Vesuvius.
Mount Everest has never erupted, it is not a volcano.
Mount Vesuvius, Italy
I do not think Mount Everest has ever been a volcano.
Mount Vesuvius which last erupted in 1944.
Mount Fuji is classified as an active volcano that last erupted in 1707-08.
Mount Redoubt which became active in 2009 last erupted in 1990.
No. Mount Vesuvius last erupted in 1944.
No. The Thera volcano is rebuilding itself and last erupted in 1950.