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{{Infobox mountain
{{infobox
| name=Mount Pinatubo
| child      = {{{child|}}}
| other_name = ''Bulkang Pinatubo''
| bodyclass  = vcard
| photo=Pinatubo91eruption clark air base.jpg
| bodystyle  = line-height: normal; font-size:95%; border-spacing: 2px;
| photo_caption=The [[eruption column]] of Mount Pinatubo on June 12, 1991, three days before the climactic eruption.
| elevation_m=1,486
| elevation_ref={{small|(current)}}<br />1,745 m (5,725 ft) {{small|(before 1991 eruption)}}
| prominence=
| language=Filipino
| pronunciation={{IPAc-en|ˌ|p|iː|n|ə|ˈ|t|uː|b|oʊ}}
| location=Provinces of [[Zambales]], [[Tarlac province|Tarlac]] and [[Pampanga]] on [[Luzon]] island, [[Philippines]]
| range=[[Zambales Mountains]]
| coordinates={{Coord|15|08|30|N|120|21|00|E|type:mountain_region:PH|display=inline,title}}
| topo=
| type=[[Stratovolcano]]<ref>[http://www.volcano.si.edu/world/volcano.cfm?vnum=0703-083 Pinatubo], [[Global Volcanism Program]].</ref>
| age=Between 635,000 ± 80,000<br />and 1.1 ±; 0.09 million years<ref>{{cite web
  |url=http://volcano.phivolcs.dost.gov.ph/update_VMEPD/Volcano/VolcanoList/pinatubo.htm
  |title=Pinatubo Volcano
  |publisher=The [[Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology]] (PHIVOLCS) }}</ref>
| last_eruption=1993
| first_ascent=
| easiest_route=
}}


'''Mount Pinatubo''' is an [[active volcano|active]] [[stratovolcano]] located on the island of [[Luzon]], near the [[tripoint]] of the [[Philippine province]]s of [[Zambales]], [[Tarlac]], and [[Pampanga]].<ref name="Topo">[http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/ams/philippines/txu-oclc-6539351-nd51-1-450.jpg "Tarlac map"]. University of Texas in Austin Library. Retrieved on 2011-08-02.</ref> It is located in the Cabusilan Mountains<ref name="Topo"/><ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=Hv9GAQAAIAAJ "Report of the Philippine Commission to the President, 1901 Vol. III"], pg. 141. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1901.</ref> separating the west coast of Luzon from the central plains.  Before the volcanic activities of 1991, its eruptive history was unknown to most people. It was heavily [[erosion|eroded]], inconspicuous and obscured from view.  It was covered with dense [[forest]] which supported a population of several thousand indigenous people, the [[Aeta]]s, who fled to the mountains during the [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]] [[History of the Philippines (1521-1898)|conquest]] of the Philippines.
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                | <includeonly>{{error|Mountain name required|tag=span}}<!--
                  -->{{main other|[[Category:Mountain articles requiring maintenance]]}}</includeonly>}}


The volcano's [[Plinian]] / [[Ultra-Plinian]] eruption on June 15, 1991 produced the second largest terrestrial eruption of the 20th century after the 1912 eruption of [[Novarupta]] in the [[Alaska Peninsula]].<ref name=Pinatubo1991>{{cite web|title=The Cataclysmic 1991 Eruption of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines|url=http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/1997/fs113-97/|accessdate=2007-04-09}}</ref>  Complicating the eruption was the arrival of Typhoon Yunya bringing a lethal mix of ash and rain.  Successful predictions at the onset of the climactic eruption led to the evacuation of tens of thousands of people from the surrounding areas, saving many lives, but the surrounding areas were severely damaged by [[pyroclastic flow]]s, ash deposits, and subsequently, by the [[lahar]]s caused by rainwaters re-mobilizing earlier volcanic deposits destroying thousands of infrastructures and altering the river systems months to years after the eruption.<ref name=Pinatubo1991/><ref>Rodolfo, Umbal, and Alonso. [http://pubs.usgs.gov/pinatubo/rodolfo/index.html "Two Years of Lahars on the Western Flank of Mount Pinatubo: Initiation, Flow Processes, Deposits, and Attendant Geomorphic and Hydraulic Changes"]. USGS Publications. Retrieved on 2012-03-07.</ref>
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The effects of the eruption were felt worldwide. It ejected roughly {{convert|10000000000|t|ST|lk=on}} or {{convert|10|km3|cumi|abbr=on}} of magma, and {{convert|20000000|t|ST|abbr=on}} {{chem|S|O|2|link=Sulfur_dioxide}}, bringing vast quantities of minerals and metals to the surface environment. It injected large amounts of [[Particulate|aerosol]]  into the [[stratosphere]] – more than any eruption since that of [[Krakatoa]] in 1883. Over the following months, the aerosols formed a global layer of [[sulfuric acid]] haze. Global temperatures dropped by about {{convert|0.5|C-change|F-change|1}}, and [[ozone]] depletion temporarily increased substantially.<ref name="Science News">{{cite web|url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Mt.+Pinatubo's+cloud+shades+global+climate.-a012467057|title=Mt. Pinatubo's cloud shades global climate|publisher=Science News|accessdate=2010-03-07}}</ref>
| subheader  = {{ifempty|{{{other_name|}}}|{{{native_name|}}}}}


==Overview of the area==
| image      = {{#if:{{{photo|}}}|[[Image:{{{photo|}}}|{{least|{{ifempty|{{{photo_width|}}}|{{{photo_size|}}}}}|280}}px<!--
[[File:Tephra fall from 1991 eruption of Mt Pinatubo.gif|thumb|300px|left|Location of Mount Pinatubo, showing area over which ash from the 1991 eruption fell]]
                -->{{#if:{{{photo_alt|}}}|{{!}}alt={{{photo_alt|}}}}}]]}}
| caption    = {{{photo_caption|}}}


The volcano is located {{convert|87|km|mi|abbr=on}} northwest of [[Manila]], the capital of the Philippines. Near Mount Pinatubo, the United States maintained two large military bases in the region.  The [[U.S. Naval Base Subic Bay]] was located {{convert|37|km|mi|abbr=on}} south of Pinatubo, while the extent of [[Clark Air Base]] was just {{convert|14|km|mi|abbr=on}} to the east of the volcano's summit.<ref name=K-118B>Tactical Pilotage Chart, Sheet K-11B, Defense Mapping Agency, Department of Defense, 1982.</ref> Clark Air Base's residential areas and petroleum storage facilities were in much closer proximity to the volcano than the airfield complex and neighboring [[Angeles City]].
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===The Aetas===
| label2  = [[Summit (topography)|Elevation]]
An indigenous group of people, the [[Aetas]] (also spelled as Ayta/Ita), had lived on the slopes of the volcano and in surrounding areas for several centuries, having fled the lowlands to escape persecution by the Spanish during their [[History of the Philippines (1521-1898)|conquest]] of the Philippines which began in 1565. They were a [[hunter-gatherer]] people who were extremely successful in surviving in the dense jungles of the area. These people also grew some staple crops such as [[wheat]], [[barley]], [[rice]] and raised animals.
| data2    = {{#if:{{{elevation|}}} | {{{elevation|}}}
            | {{#if:{{{elevation_m|}}} | {{Infobox mountain/convert|{{{elevation_m|}}}|m}}
              |  {{#if:{{{elevation_ft|}}} | {{Infobox mountain/convert|{{{elevation_ft|}}}|ft}}}}}}}}<!--
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In total, about 30,000&nbsp;people lived on the flanks of the volcano in about 25 established [[barangay]]s (villages) and other small settlements like Tarukan village and Maruglu. The dense jungle covering most of the mountain and surrounding peaks supported the hunter-gathering Aeta, while on the surrounding flatter areas, the abundant rainfall of almost {{convert|4|m}} annually) provided by the [[monsoon]] climate and the fertile volcanic soils provided excellent conditions for [[agriculture]].
| label3  = [[Topographic prominence|Prominence]]
| data3    = {{#if:{{{prominence|}}} | {{{prominence|}}}
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              |  {{#if:{{{prominence_ft|}}} | {{Infobox mountain/convert|{{{prominence_ft|}}}|ft}}}}}}}}<!--
            -->{{{prominence_ref|}}}


==Geological history==
| label4  = [[Topographic prominence#Prominence parentage|Parent peak]]
Mount Pinatubo's summit before the 1991 eruption was {{convert|1745|m|ft|abbr=on}} above sea level, only about {{convert|600|m|ft|abbr=on}} above nearby [[plain]]s, and only about {{convert|200|m|ft|abbr=on}} higher than surrounding peaks, which largely obscured it from view. It is part of a chain of [[volcanoes]] which lie along the western side of the edge of the island of [[Luzon]] called the [[Zambales Mountains]].  Pinatubo belongs to the Cabusilan Mountains, the central range of the Zambales Mountains, which consists of Mt. Cuadrado, Mt. Negron, Mt. Mataba and Mt. Pinatubo.<ref>U.S. War Department. [http://books.google.com/books?id=Hv9GAQAAIAAJ&pg=141#v=onepage&q&f=false "Report of the Philippine Commission, 1901 Vol. III"), pg. 141. Government Printing Office, Washington.]</ref> They are [[subduction]] volcanoes, formed by the [[Eurasian Plate]] sliding under the [[Philippine Mobile Belt]] along the [[Manila Trench]] to the west.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Philippines/Pinatubo/description_pinatubo.html|title=Description: Mount Pinatubo, Philippines|date=July 13, 2009|author=Topinka, Lyn|accessdate=April 18, 2010|publisher=[[United States Geological Survey]]}}</ref>  Mount Pinatubo and the other volcanoes on this [[volcanic belt]] arise due to [[magma]] occlusion from this [[subduction]] [[plate tectonics|plate]] boundary.
| data4    = {{{parent_peak|}}}


Pinatubo is flanked on the west by the Zambales [[Ophiolite]] Complex, which is an easterly-dipping section of [[Eocene]] oceanic crust which was uplifted during the late [[Oligocene]]. The Tarlac Formation consists of marine, nonmarine and volcaniclastic sediments in the north, east and southeast of Pinatubo which were formed in the late [[Miocene]] and [[Pliocene]].<ref name="Newhall"/>
| class6  = category
| label6  = [[List of mountain lists|Listing]]
| data6    = {{{listing|}}}


The most recent study of Mount Pinatubo prior to the activities of 1991 was the overall geological study in 1983 and 1984 made by F. G. Delfin for the [[Philippine National Oil Company]] as part of the surface investigations of the area prior to the exploratory drilling and well testing for [[geothermal energy|geothermal]] sources in 1988 to 1990.  He recognized two life histories of the mountain, which he classified as 'ancestral' and 'modern' Pinatubo.<ref name="Newhall"/><ref>Delfin, F.G.; Villarosa, H.G.; and Layugan, D.B. [http://pubs.usgs.gov/pinatubo/delfin/index.html "Geothermal Exploration of the pre-1001 Mount Pinatubo Hydrothermal System"]. United States Geological Survey Publications. Retrieved on 2012-03-07.</ref>
| label7  = Translation
| data7    = {{#if:{{{translation|}}}| ''{{{translation|}}}''<!--
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===Ancestral Pinatubo===
| label8  = [[help:IPA|Pronunciation]]
[[File:Pre-eruption Pinatubo.jpg|thumb|Pinatubo before the major eruption of 1991.]]
| data8    = {{#if:{{{pronunciation|}}}|{{IPA|{{{pronunciation|}}}}}}}
Activity of Ancestral Pinatubo seems to have begun about 1.1&nbsp;million years ago and probably ended tens of thousands or more before the birth of 'Modern Pinatubo'.  Much of the rugged land surrounding the present volcano consists of remnants of 'ancestral' Pinatubo.  It was an [[andesite]] and [[dacite]] [[stratovolcano]] with its eruptive activity much less explosive than modern Pinatubo.  Its center was roughly in the same location of the current volcano.  The projected height of the mountain is up to {{convert|2300|m|abbr=on}} above [[sea level]] if it was a lone peak, based on profile fitting to the remaining lower slopes, or lower if it had more than one peak.<ref name="Newhall"/> 


The old volcano is exposed in the walls of an old {{convert|3.5|x|4.5|km|abbr=on}} wide [[caldera]], referred to as ''Tayawan Caldera'' by Delfin.  Some of the nearby peaks are the remnants of ancestral Pinatubo, left behind when the softer parts of the old mountain slopes were eroded by [[weathering]].  Ancestral Pinatubo is a [[somma volcano]] with 'Modern' Pinatubo as the new cone.  Its remaining caldera rim includes Mount Donald MacDonald, forming the southeast rim, and Mount Tayawan, the longer north to northeast rim, after which the caldera was named.  Mount Dorst, to the east, is part of the dip slope of the ancestral Pinatubo.  Several mountains near modern Pinatubo are old satellite vents of ancestral Pinatubo, forming [[volcanic plug]]s and [[lava dome]]s.  These satellite vents were probably active around the same time as the ancestral volcano and include the domes of Mount Negron, Mount Cuadrado, Mount Mataba, and the Bituin and Tapungho plugs.<ref name="Newhall"/>
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===Modern Pinatubo===
| data11  = {{#if:{{{photo|}}}
After a long period of [[dormant volcano|dormancy]], Modern Pinatubo was born in the cataclysmic and the most explosive eruption of Pinatubo around 35,000&nbsp;years ago. The eruption, which was estimated to be five times larger than the 1991 eruption, deposited [[pyroclastic flow]] material up to {{convert|100|m}} thick on all sides of the mountain. The total volume of pyroclastic flows deposited around the volcano may have been up to {{convert|25|km3|cumi|abbr=on}}, but the total volume of volcanic material ejected during the eruption is unknown.  The removal of this amount of material from the underlying [[magma chamber]] led to the formation of the Tayawan [[caldera]]. The eruptive period started by the eruption is referred to by Delfin as the ''Inararo Eruptive Period'', named after a village that was destroyed in the 1991 eruption.<ref name="Newhall"/>
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Later eruptions of Modern Pinatubo occurred episodically and lasted for periods much shorter than the repose intervals between them. Subsequent eruptions and eruptive period occurred about ~17,000 (''Sacobia Eruptive Period''); ~9000 (''Pasbul Eruptive Period''); ~6000–5000 (''Crow Valley Eruptive Period''); ~3,900–2,300 (''Maraunot Eruptive Period''); and ~500 years ago (''Buag Eruptive Period''). Each of these eruptions seems to have been very large, ejecting more than 10&nbsp;km³ of material and covering large parts of the surrounding areas with pyroclastic flow deposits. Some eruptive periods have lasted decades and perhaps as much as several centuries and might appear to include multiple large explosive eruptions.<ref name="Newhall"/>
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The maximum size of eruptions in each eruptive period though have been getting smaller through the >35,000-yr history of modern Pinatubo, but this might be an artifact of erosion and (or) burial of older deposits. The oldest eruption of modern Pinatubo, Inararo, was also its largest. Those of the Pasbul period were as energetic, if not as voluminous as the Inararo eruptions. Although smaller than the Inararo eruptions, those of the Crow Valley and Maraunot periods were still about 2 to 3 times as big as that of 1991 based on the pyroclastic flow runout distances and depths of valley filling. Eruptions of the Buag period were roughly the same size as those of 1991.  The 1991 eruption was among the smallest documented in its geologic record.<ref name="Newhall"/>
| class13 = category
| label13 = [[Mountain range|Range]]
| data13  = {{{range|}}}


The volcano has never grown very large in between eruptions, because it produces mostly unwelded, easily erodible deposits, and periodically destroys the viscous domes that fill its vents. After the Buag eruption (~500 years ago), the volcano lay dormant, its slopes becoming completely covered in dense [[rainforest]] and eroded into gullies and ravines.  The ~500-year repose though between the Buag and present eruptive periods is among the shorter repose periods recognized in its geologic history.<ref name="Newhall">{{cite book|first=Christopher G.|last=Newhall|coauthors=Punongbayan, Raymundo S., eds.|chapter=Eruptive history of Mount Pinatubo|chapter-url=http://pubs.usgs.gov/pinatubo/newhall/index.html |title=FIRE and MUD: Eruptions and Lahars of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines |url=http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Philippines/Pinatubo/Publications/FireMud/about_the_book.html|publisher=Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology; University of Washington Press|year=1996|isbn=0-295-97585-7 }}</ref>
| label14 = [[British national grid reference system|OS grid]]
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==The 1991 eruption==
| label15  = [[Irish grid reference system|OSI/OSNI grid]]
{{refimprove section|date=June 2011}}
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===Possible precursor in 1990===
| label16  = [[Geographic coordinate system|Coordinates]]
On July 16, 1990, the major [[1990 Luzon earthquake]] of [[Moment Magnitude|magnitude]] 7.7 struck central Luzon. This was the largest earthquake recorded in 1990,<ref>{{cite web|author=USGS|title=Earthquake Information for 1990|url=http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/eq_depot/1990/|accessdate= 2010-03-06}}</ref><ref name="USGSMagPolicy">[http://earthquake.usgs.gov/aboutus/docs/020204mag_policy.php USGS Earthquake Magnitude Policy]</ref>
| data16  = {{#if:{{{lat_d|}}}{{{long_d|}}}
comparable in size to the [[1906 San Francisco earthquake]] and the [[2008 Sichuan earthquake]]. Its epicenter was in [[Rizal, Nueva Ecija]] municipality,<ref>
            | {{Infobox coord
{{cite web|last=|first=|authorlink=|coauthors=|title=The July 16 Luzon Earthquake: A Technical Monograph|work=Inter-Agency Committee for Documenting and Establishing Database on the July 1990 Earthquake|publisher=[[Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology]]|year=2001|url= http://earthquake.phivolcs.dost.gov.ph/update_SOEPD/Earthquake/1990LuzonEQ_Monograph/foreword.html|doi=|accessdate=2009-01-07}}</ref>
              | lat_d  = {{{lat_d|}}}
about 100&nbsp;km northeast of Pinatubo, and faulted northwest-southeast through three provinces. It also followed the [[Philippine Fault System]] west as far as [[Baguio City]], which was devastated, and is located about {{convert|80|km}} north-northeast of Pinatubo, leading volcanologists to speculate that it might ultimately have triggered the 1991 eruption, although this is impossible to prove conclusively. Two weeks after the earthquake, local residents reported [[steam]] coming from the volcano, but scientists who visited the mountain in response found  only small [[landslide]]s rather than any eruptive activity.
              | lat_m  = {{{lat_m|}}}
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            }}{{ifempty|{{{coordinates_ref|}}}|{{{coords_ref|}}}}}


===1991 activities leading to the eruption===
| label17  = [[Topographic map|Topo map]]
On March 15, 1991, a succession of earthquakes was felt by villagers on the northwestern side of the volcano. Further [[Harmonic tremor|earthquakes of increasing intensity]] were felt over the next two weeks, and it became clear some kind of volcanic activity was likely. On April 2, the volcano awoke, with [[phreatic eruption]]s occurring near the summit along a {{convert|1.5|km|abbr=on}} long [[Fracture (geology)|fissure]]. Over the next few weeks, small eruptions continued, dusting the surrounding areas with [[volcanic ash]]. [[Seismograph]]s recorded hundreds of small earthquakes every day.
| data17  = {{{topo|}}}


Scientists immediately installed monitoring equipment and analyzed the volcano for clues as to its previous eruptive history. [[Radiocarbon dating]] of charcoal found in old volcanic deposits revealed the last three major explosive eruption periods in recent [[millennia]], about 5500, 3500 and 500&nbsp;years ago. Geological mapping showed that much of the surrounding plains were formed by [[lahar]] deposits from previous eruptions.
| header19 = {{#if:{{{type|}}}{{{age|}}}{{{volcanic_arc|}}}{{{volcanic_belt|}}}{{{volcanic_field|}}}<!--
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Volcanic activity increased throughout May. Measurements of [[sulfur dioxide]] emissions showed a rapid increase from {{convert|500|t|ST|abbr=on}} per day by May 13 to {{convert|5000|t|ST|abbr=on}} per day by May 28. This implied that there was a rising column of fresh [[magma]] beneath the volcano. After May 28, the amount of {{chem|S|O|2}} being emitted decreased substantially, raising fears that the degassing of the magma had been blocked somehow, leading to a [[pressure]] build-up in the [[magma chamber]] and a high likelihood of explosive eruptions.
| label20 = [[List of mountain types|Type]]
| data20  = {{{type|}}}


The first [[magma]]tic eruptions occurred on June 3, and the first large explosion on June 7 generated an ash column {{convert|7|km|mi|abbr=on}} high. The [[Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology]] (PHIVOLCS) issued a warning indicating the possibility of a major eruption within two weeks.
| label21  = [[Geologic time scale|Age of rock]]
| data21  = {{{age|}}}


===Evacuations===
| label22  = {{#if:{{{volcanic_arc|}}}|[[Volcanic arc]]
[[File:Pinatubo evacuation areas.gif|thumb|300px|Map of Pinatubo showing nearby peaks and the evacuation zones]]
            | {{#if:{{{volcanic_belt|}}}|[[Volcanic belt]]
              | {{#if:{{{volcanic_field|}}}|[[Volcanic field]]
                | {{#if:{{{volcanic_arc/belt|}}}|Volcanic [[Volcanic arc|arc]]/[[Volcanic belt|belt]]}}}}}}}}
| data22  = {{ifempty|{{{volcanic_arc|}}}|{{{volcanic_belt|}}}|{{{volcanic_field|}}}|{{{volcanic_arc/belt|}}}}}


Given all the signs that a very large eruption was imminent, [[PHIVOLCS]] – assisted by the [[U.S. Geological Survey]] – worked to convince local inhabitants of the severity of the threat. A false warning might have led to cynicism about any later warnings, but delaying a warning until an eruption began might lead to thousands of deaths, so the [[volcanologists]] were under some pressure to deliver a timely and accurate assessment of the volcanic risk.
| label23  = [[Volcano|Last eruption]]
| data23  = {{{last_eruption|}}}


Three successive evacuation zones were defined, the innermost containing everything within 10&nbsp;km of the volcano's summit, the second extending from 10 to 20&nbsp;km from the summit, and the third extending from {{convert|20|-|40|km|mi|abbr=on}} from the summit ([[Clark Air Base]] and [[Angeles City]] were in this zone). The {{convert|10|km|abbr=on}} and {{convert|10|–|20|km|mi|abbr=on}} zones had a total population of about 40,000, while some 331,000&nbsp;people lived in the {{convert|20|–|40|km|mi|abbr=on}} zone. Five stages of volcanic alert were defined, from level&nbsp;1 (low level seismic disturbances) up to level&nbsp;5 (major eruption in progress). Daily alerts were issued stating the alert level and associated danger area, and the information was announced in major national and local [[newspaper]]s, on [[radio]] and [[television]] stations, by [[nongovernmental organization]]s (NGOs), and directly to the endangered inhabitants.
| header25 = {{#if:{{{first_ascent|}}}{{{easiest_route|}}}|Climbing}}


Many of the [[Aeta]] who lived on the slopes of the volcano left their villages of their own volition when the first explosions began in April, gathering in a village about {{convert|12|km|mi}} from the summit. They moved to increasingly distant villages as the eruptions escalated, some Aeta moving up to nine times in the two months preceding the cataclysmic eruption.
| label26  = [[First ascent]]
| data26  = {{{first_ascent|}}}


The first formal evacuations were ordered from the {{convert|10|km|mi|abbr=on}} zone on April 7. Evacuation of the {{convert|10|–|20|km|mi|abbr=on}} zone was ordered when a level 4 alert was issued on June 7. A level 5 alert triggered evacuation of the {{convert|20|–|40|km|mi|abbr=on}} zone on June 13, and in all some 60,000&nbsp;people had left the area within {{convert|30|km|mi}} of the volcano before June 15. Most people temporarily relocated to [[Manila]] and [[Quezon City]], with some 30,000 using the [[Amoranto Velodrome]] in Quezon City as an [[Emergency evacuation|evacuee camp]].
| label27  = Easiest [[Climbing route|route]]
| data27  = {{{easiest_route|}}}


===Climactic eruption buildup===
| data28  = {{{embedded|}}}
[[File:VulcanoPinatuboJune1991.gif|thumb|The eruption cloud shortly before the climactic eruption]]
}}<noinclude>
In early June, [[tiltmeter]] measurements had shown that the volcano was inflating, evidently due to growing amounts of magma filling the reservoir beneath the summit. At the same time, seismic activity, previously concentrated at a depth of a few kilometers below a point about {{convert|5|km|mi}} northwest of the summit, shifted to shallow depths just below the summit. On June 7, the first magmatic eruptions took place with the formation of a [[lava dome]] at the summit of the volcano. The dome grew substantially over the next five days, reaching a maximum diameter of about {{convert|200|m|ft|abbr=on}} and a height of {{convert|40|m|ft|abbr=on}}.
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A small explosion at 03:41 on June 12 marked the beginning of a new, more violent phase of the eruption. A few hours later, large explosions lasting about half an hour generated an [[eruption column]] which quickly reached heights of over {{convert|19|km|mi}}, and which generated [[pyroclastic flow]]s extending up to {{convert|4|km|mi|abbr=on}} from the summit in some river [[valley]]s. Fourteen hours later, a 15-minute eruption hurled ash to heights of {{convert|24|km|mi|abbr=on}}. Friction in the uprushing ash column generated abundant [[lightning]].
  TO THE /doc SUBPAGE, THANKS
 
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A third large eruption began at 08:41 on June 13, after an intense swarm of small earthquakes over the previous two hours. It lasted about five minutes, and the eruption column once again reached 24&nbsp;km. After three hours of quiet, seismic activity began, growing more and more intense over the next 24&nbsp;hours, until a three-minute eruption generated a {{convert|21|km|mi|abbr=on}} high eruption column at 13:09 on June 14.
{{documentation}}
 
</noinclude>
[[Tephra]] fall from these four large eruptions was extensive to the southwest of the volcano. Two hours after the last of these four explosions, a series of eruptions began which lasted for the next 24&nbsp;hours, and which saw the production of much larger pyroclastic flows and surges which traveled several kilometres down river valleys on the flanks of the volcano.
 
[[Dacite]] was the [[igneous rock]] making up the tephra in these eruptions and in the following climactic event. The most abundant [[phenocryst]] minerals were [[hornblende]] and [[plagioclase]], but an unusual phenocryst mineral was also present—the [[calcium sulfate]], [[anhydrite]]. The dacite [[magma]] was more oxidized than most magmas, and the sulfur-rich nature of the eruption was probably causally related to the [[mineral redox buffer|redox state]].
 
===The climactic eruption===
All the seismographs at [[Clark Air Base]] had been rendered inoperative by 14:30 on June 15, mostly by pyroclastic density currents. Intense [[Earth's atmosphere|atmospheric]] pressure variation was also recorded.
 
[[File:Pinatubo91 lateral blast plume pinatubo 06-15-91-resized.jpg|thumb|left|On June 15, 1991, the eruption plume hours before the climactic eruption.]]
On the same day, [[1991 Pacific typhoon season|Typhoon Yunya (1991)]] struck the island, passing about {{convert|75|km|mi|abbr=on}} north of the volcano. The typhoon rains made direct visual observations of the eruption impossible, but measurements showed that ash was ejected to heights of {{convert|34|km|mi|abbr=on}} by the most violent phase of the eruption, which lasted about three hours. [[Pyroclastic flow]]s poured from the summit, reaching as far as {{convert|16|km|mi|abbr=on}} away from it. [[Typhoon]] rains mixed with the ash deposits caused massive [[lahars]].
 
The ash cloud from the volcano covered an area of some {{convert|125000|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}}, bringing total darkness to much of central Luzon. Almost all of the island received some ashfall, which formed a heavy, rain-saturated snow-like blanket. [[Tephra]] fell over most of the [[South China Sea]] and ashfall was recorded as far away as [[Vietnam]], [[Cambodia]] and [[Malaysia]].
 
Twelve days after the first magmatic eruptions of June 3, on June 15, 1991, by about 22:30, and about nine hours after the onset of the most recent climactic phase, atmospheric pressure waves had decreased to the pre-eruption levels. No seismic records were available at this time, but volcanologists believe 22:30 marked the end of the climactic eruption.
 
Vast quantities of minerals and metals were brought to the surface. Overall, introduced to the surface environment, was an estimated {{convert|800000|t|ST|abbr=on}} of [[zinc]], {{convert|600000|t|ST|abbr=on}} of [[copper]], {{convert|550000|t|ST|abbr=on}} of [[chromium]], {{convert|300000|t|ST|abbr=on}} of [[nickel]], and massive amounts of toxic heavy metals such as {{convert|100000|t|ST|abbr=on}} of [[lead]], {{convert|10000|t|ST|abbr=on}} of [[arsenic]], {{convert|1000|t|ST|abbr=on}} of [[cadmium]], and {{convert|800|t|ST|abbr=on}} of [[Mercury (element)|mercury]].<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1080/10807030091124383|author=Garret, R.G.|year=2000|title=Natural sources of metals in the environment|journal=Human and Ecological Risk Assessment: an International Journal|volume=6|issue=6|month=November|pages=945–963}}</ref>
 
===The eruption effects on aircraft===
At least sixteen commercial aircraft made damaging encounters with the ash cloud ejected by the June 15 eruption, as well as others on the ground. The encounters caused loss of power to one engine on each of two different aircraft. A total of 10 engines were damaged and replaced, including all four engines of a single jumbo jet. Longer term damage to aircraft and engines was reported, including accumulation of sulfate deposits on engines.<ref>[http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20100417-264737/In-1991-it-was-Pinatubo In 1991, it was Pinatubo - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The eruption also forced the [[Philippine Air Force]] to retire their [[Vought F-8 Crusader|Vought F8Us]] from service.{{why|date=September 2012}}{{citation needed|date=September 2012}}
 
==Aftermath of the 1991 eruption==
[[File:Pinatubo early eruption 1991.jpg|thumb|Summit caldera as seen on Aug. 1, 1991]]
 
===Explosivity of the eruption===
The June 15 eruption had a [[Volcanic Explosivity Index]] (VEI) of 6, and came some 450–500&nbsp;years after the volcano's last known eruptive activity.  The eruption ejected about {{convert|10|km3|cumi|abbr=on}} of material, making it the largest eruption since that of [[Novarupta]] in 1912 and some ten times larger than the [[1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens]]. Ejected material such as [[tephra]] fallout and pyroclastic flow deposits are much less dense than magma, and the volume of ejected material was equivalent to about {{convert|4|km3|cumi|abbr=on}} of unerupted material.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/seg/hazard/stratoguide/pinfact.html|title=Mt. Pinatubo, Luzon, Philippines|publisher=National Geophysical Data Center (U.S. NOAA)|accessdate=2007-12-02}}</ref>
The former summit of the volcano was obliterated and replaced by a [[caldera]] {{convert|2.5|km|abbr=on}} wide. The highest point on the caldera rim now stood {{convert|1485|m|abbr=on}} above sea level, some {{convert|260|m|abbr=on}} lower than the pre-eruption summit.
 
===Death toll===
A reported 847 people were killed by the eruption mostly by roofs collapsing under the weight of accumulated wet ash, a hazard that was amplified by the simultaneous arrival of Typhoon Yunya.<ref>[http://www.coolgeography.co.uk/GCSE/Year11/Managing%20Hazards/Volcanoes/mount_pinatubo.htm CoolGeography - Mount Pinatubo]</ref><ref>{{cite book|chapter-url=http://expo.edu.ph/pinatubo/page5.html|chapter=Ashfall, Pyroclastic Flow, Lahar: The Aftermath|url=http://expo.edu.ph/pinatubo/|title=Pinatubu Volcano: The Sleeping Giant Awakens|publisher=[http://expo.edu.ph expo.edu.ph]}}.</ref>  The evacuation in the days preceding the eruption certainly saved tens of thousands of lives, and has been hailed as a great success for [[volcanology]] and eruption prediction.  However, damage to [[healthcare]] facilities, and the spread of illnesses in relocation facilities due to poor sanitation, led to rising death tolls in the months following the eruption.{{Citation needed|date=September 2011}}
 
After the eruption, about 500,000&nbsp;people continue to live within {{convert|40|km|mi|abbr=on}} of the mountain, with population centers including the 150,000 in [[Angeles City]], and 30,000 at [[Clark Freeport Zone]].
 
===Effects on agriculture===
Many [[reforestation]] projects were destroyed in the eruption, with a total area of {{convert|150|km2|acre|lk=on|abbr=on}} valued at 125&nbsp;million pesos destroyed. [[Agriculture]] was heavily disrupted, with {{convert|800|km2|acre|abbr=on}} of [[rice]]-growing farmland destroyed, and almost 800,000&nbsp;head of livestock and [[poultry]] killed, destroying the livelihoods of thousands of farmers. The cost to agriculture of eruption effects was estimated to be 1.5&nbsp;billion pesos.
 
Many farmers near Pinatubo began growing crops such as peanuts, cassava and sweet potatoes, which are quick ripening and could be harvested before the threat of lahar flows during the late summer rainy season.<ref name=reilly2009p70 />
[[File:Pinatubo dust layer.jpg|thumb|Space Shuttle (Mission [[STS-43]]) photograph of the Earth over South America taken on August 8, 1991, showing double layer of Pinatubo aerosol cloud (dark streaks) above high cumulonimbus tops]]
 
===Local economic and social effects===
In total, 364 communities and 2.1&nbsp;million people were affected by the eruption, with livelihoods and houses being damaged or destroyed. More than 8,000 houses were completely destroyed, and a further 73,000 were damaged.  In addition to the severe damage sustained by these communities, roads and communications were damaged or destroyed by pyroclastic flows and lahar throughout the areas surrounding the volcanoes. Total losses in 1991 and 1992 alone were estimated at 10.6 and 1.2 billion pesos respectively, including damage to public infrastructure estimated at 3.8 billion pesos (~US$92,000,000).  [[Education]] for thousands of children was seriously disrupted by the destruction of [[school]]s in the eruption.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Joan Martí|author2=Gerald Ernst|title=Volcanoes and the environment|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=F0LFIdaao-AC|year=2005|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-59254-3|pages=[http://books.google.com/books?id=F0LFIdaao–AC&pg=PA450 450]}}</ref>
 
The eruption of Pinatubo severely hampered the [[economic development]] of the surrounding areas. The gross regional domestic product of the Pinatubo area accounted for about 10% of the total Philippine [[gross domestic product]]. The GRDP had been growing at 5% annually before the eruption, but fell by more than 3% from 1990 to 1991. In 1991, damage to crops and property was estimated at $374 million, to which continuing lahar flows added a further $69 million in 1992. 42 percent of the cropland around the volcano was affected by mudflows, dealing a severe blow to the agricultural economy in the region.<ref name=reilly2009p69>{{Harvnb|Reilly|2009|p=69}}.</ref>
 
===Lahars===
[[File:River valley filled in by pyroclastic flows, Mt. Pinatubo.jpg|thumb|Before and after the eruption: a river valley filled in by [[pyroclastic flow]] deposits]]
Since the eruption, each onset of heavy rain brought [[lahars]] from the mountain range, causing the displacement of thousands of people. Inflicting extensive damage to buildings and [[infrastructure]] costing billions to repair, a large supply of funds were spent in constructing [[dike (construction)|dikes]] and [[dam]]s to control the post-eruption lahar flows.<ref name=reilly2009p70>{{Harvnb|Reilly|2009|p=70}}.</ref>
 
Several important river systems stem from Mount Pinatubo, with the major rivers being the Abacan, Tarlac, Pasig-Potrero, Sta. Lucia, Bucao, Santo Tomas, Maloma, Tanguay, Ashley, and Kileng rivers. Before the eruption, these river systems were important [[ecosystem]]s, but the eruption filled many valleys with deep pyroclastic deposits. Since 1991, the rivers have been clogged with [[sediment]], and the valleys have seen frequent [[lahar]]s which continued for years after the eruption. Studies show that the river systems will take years to recover from the 1991 eruption.<ref name=reilly2009p70 />
 
===Clark Air Base and Subic Naval Base===
The [[United States Air Force]] initiated a massive [[airlift]] effort to evacuate American service members and their families during and immediately following the eruption, named [[Operation Fiery Vigil]]. Most personnel were initially relocated to [[Guam]], [[Okinawa]], and [[Hawaii]], although some returned to the continental [[United States]]. Clark Air Base was ultimately abandoned by the United States military, and Subic Bay reverted to Philippine control the next year following the breakdown of lease negotiations.
 
===Global environmental effects===
The powerful eruption of such an enormous volume of lava and ash injected significant quantities of [[Particulate|aerosols]] and [[dust]] into the [[stratosphere]]. Sulfur dioxide oxidized in the atmosphere to produce a haze of [[sulfuric acid]] droplets, which gradually spread throughout the stratosphere over the year following the eruption. The injection of aerosols into the stratosphere is thought to have been the largest since the eruption of [[Krakatoa]] in 1883, with a total mass of {{chem|S|O|2}} of about {{convert|17000000|t|ST|abbr=on}} being injected&mdash;the largest volume ever recorded by modern instruments (see [[:Image:TOMS SO2 time nov03.png|chart]] and [[:Image:TOMS SO2 Jun17 91.gif|figure]]).
 
This very large stratospheric injection resulted in a reduction in the normal amount of [[sunlight]] reaching the Earth's surface by roughly 10% (see [[:Image:Mauna Loa atmospheric transmission.png|figure]]). This led to a decrease in [[northern hemisphere]] average temperatures of {{convert|0.5|-|0.6|C-change|F-change|1}} and a global fall of about {{convert|0.4|C-change|F-change|1}}.<ref name="Science News"/><ref>{{cite journal | author = Ward, Peter L. | authorlink = Peter Langdon Ward | date = 2 April 2009 | title = Sulfur Dioxide Initiates Global Climate Change in Four Ways | journal = Thin Solid Films | volume = 517 | issue = 11 | pages = 3188–3203 | doi = 10.1016/j.tsf.2009.01.005 | url= http://www.tetontectonics.org/Climate/SO2InitiatesClimateChange.pdf |accessdate= 2010-03-19|bibcode = 2009TSF...517.3188W }}</ref> At the same time, the temperature in the stratosphere rose to several degrees higher than normal, due to absorption of radiation by the aerosol. The stratospheric cloud from the eruption persisted in the atmosphere for three years after the eruption.
 
[[File:TOMS AI Jun16 91.gif|thumb|right|Satellite measurements of ash and [[Particulate|aerosol]] emissions from Mount Pinatubo.]]
The eruption had a significant effect on [[ozone]] levels in the atmosphere, causing a large increase in the destruction rate of ozone.  Ozone levels at mid-latitudes reached their lowest recorded levels, while in the [[southern hemisphere]] winter of 1992, the [[ozone hole]] over [[Antarctica]] reached its largest ever size until then, with the fastest recorded ozone depletion rates.  The eruption of [[Mount Hudson]] in [[Chile]] in August 1991 also contributed to southern hemisphere ozone destruction, with measurements showing a sharp decrease in ozone levels at the [[tropopause]] when the aerosol clouds from Pinatubo and Hudson arrived.
 
<!-- commenting this out for now, don't trust this source but am looking for papers which might back this up.
Another noticeable effect of the dust in the atmosphere was the appearance of [[lunar eclipse]]s.  Normally even at mid-eclipse, the moon is still visible although much dimmed, but in the year following the Pinatubo eruption, the moon was hardly visible at all during eclipses, due to much greater absorption of sunlight by dust in the atmosphere.
It has also been suggested that excess [[cloud condensation nuclei]] from the eruption were responsible for the "[[Great Flood of 1993]]" in the United States<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://k12s.phast.umass.edu/stem/sess/snyder/Adiabatic_Change_and_Cloud.doc|title=Adiabatic Change and Cloud Formation|format=MS Word|publisher=[http://k12s.phast.umass.edu/ umassk12]: [http://k12s.phast.umass.edu/stem/ STEM Education Institute]}}{{copyvio source|date=February 2010}}</ref>-->
 
===Impact on the indigenous people of Pinatubo===
The Aeta people were the hardest hit by the eruption.  After the areas surrounding the volcano were declared safe, many Aetas returned to their old villages only to find them destroyed by pyroclastic and lahar deposits.  Some were able to return to their former way of life, but most moved instead to government-organized resettlement areas. Conditions on these were poor, with each family receiving only small plots of land not ideal for growing crops. Many Aeta found casual labor working for lowland [[farmer]]s, and overall Aeta society became much more fragmented, and reliant on and integrated with lowland culture.<ref>Shimizu, Hiromu  (2002), ''[http://web.archive.org/web/20040815181730/http://www.scs.kyushu-u.ac.jp/~hs1/anthro/shimizu_hp/introduction/essay/Ayta_Struggling.htm Struggling for Existence after the Pinatubo Eruption 1991: Catastrophe, Suffering and Rebirth of Ayta Communities]''. Paper presented inter-congress of the International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Tokyo, Japan. Retrieved from [http://www.scs.kyushu-u.ac.jp/~hs1/anthro/shimizu_hp/introduction/essay/Ayta_Struggling.htm the original] on 2004-08-15.</ref>
 
===Aftermath of the eruptions in pictures===
<center><gallery>
File:Vertical eruption at Pinatubo, 1991.jpg|Explosive eruption, late June 1991
File:Ashfall from Pinatubo, 1991.jpg|Snow-like ashfall caused by heavy rain mixing with ash columns
File:Pinatubo - pyroclastic fall.jpg|Erosional dissection of ash deposits on Pinatubo
File:Collapsed hangars at Clark Air Base.jpg|Aircraft hangars at [[Clark Air Base]] destroyed by ashfall
File:Lahars from Pinatubo volcano.jpg|Lahars from Pinatubo volcano fill the broad Santo Tomás River valley SW of the volcano
File:Ash_from_Mount_Pinatubo_covers_NS_Subic_Bay.jpg|Ashes from the then eruption of Pinatubo covers the [[U.S. Naval Base Subic Bay|U.S. Naval Base]] in [[Subic Bay]], [[Zambales]]
</gallery></center>
 
==Activity since 1991==
[[File:Mount Pinatubo 20081229 01.jpg|thumb|[[Lake Pinatubo]], the resulting crater lake of the 1991 eruption pictured here in 2008]]
[[File:Mount Pinatubo 6.jpg|thumb|Aerial view of Mt. Pinatubo and [[Lake Pinatubo]]]]
Following the climactic eruption of June 15, 1991, activity at the volcano continued at a much lower level, with continuous ash eruptions lasting until August 1991 and episodic eruptions continuing for another month. Activity then remained low until July 1992 when a new [[lava dome]] started growing in the [[caldera]]. Volcanologists suspected that further violent eruptions could be possible, and some areas were evacuated. However, the eruption was only minor and since that episode, the volcano has been quiet.
 
===Lake Pinatubo===
The 1991 caldera was subsequently  filled with water from monsoon rains and a [[crater lake]], [[Lake Pinatubo]], was formed.  In 1992, the growth of a [[lava dome]] formed an [[island]], which was eventually flooded by the lake.  Initially, the lake was hot and highly [[acid]]ic, with a minimum [[pH]] of 2 and a temperature of about {{convert|40|C|F}}.  Subsequent rainfall cooled and diluted the lake, lowering the temperature to {{convert|26|C|F}} and raising the pH to 5.5 by 2003.
 
The lake increased in depth by about {{convert|1|m|ft|abbr=on}} per month on average eventually submerging the lava dome, until September 2001, when fears that the walls of the crater might be unstable prompted the Philippine government to order a controlled draining of the lake. An estimated 9,000&nbsp;people were once again evacuated from surrounding areas in case a large [[flood]] was accidentally triggered. Workers cut a {{convert|5|m|abbr=on}} notch in the crater rim, and successfully drained about a quarter of the lake's volume.<ref>(2001_0907). [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/1530182.stm "Filipinos return as volcano lake drains"]. BBC News.</ref>
 
===Recent activity===
On the 26th of July 2011, a 5.9 magnitude earthquake struck close to Pinatubo, however no major damages or casualties were reported.<ref>Gonzaga, Robert and Orejas, Tonette (2011-07-26). [http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/30559/5-9-magnitude-quake-jolts-households-in-luzon-metro-areas "5.9-magnitude quake jolts households in Luzon, Metro areas"]. Inquirer News.</ref>
 
==Cultural history==
The word ''pinatubo'' could mean a fertile place where one can make crops grow or could mean "made to grow" in [[Tagalog language|Tagalog]] and [[Sambal language|Sambal]], which may suggest a knowledge of its previous eruption in about 1500&nbsp;AD. There is a local oral tradition that is suggestive of a folk memory of earlier large eruptions; ancient legend tells of Bacobaco, the terrible spirit of the sea, who could metamorphose into a huge turtle and who threw fire from his mouth. When being chased by the spirit hunters, Bacobaco fled to the mountain and dug a great hole in its summit showering the surrounding land with rock, mud, dust and fire for three days; howling so loudly that the earth shook.<ref>Rodolfo, K.S. & Umbal, J.V. (2008) "A prehistoric lahar-dammed lake and eruption of Mount Pinatubo described in a Philippine aborigine legend", J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res., '''176''', 432-437</ref>
 
===History among Aetas===
[[Aeta peoples|Aeta]] elders tell many stories about the history of the mountain, the best known being that it was once a Batung Mabye (Kapampangan for living stone). It was said to have been planted on a kingdom by a displeased sorcerer but relocated by a hero. The mountain was soon turned into the abode of Apo Namalyari ("The lord of happenings/ events"), the pagan deity of the Sambal, Aeta, and Kapampangans living on the Zambales range. It was said to comprise the whole mountain range until Sinukuan of [[Mount Arayat]] (the god of the Kapampangans) became a strong rival of Namalyari.  Their fight, which took place over the center plains, involved the shattering of the mountain into smaller bodies while Mount Arayat lost its center peak. Other versions have it that Pinatubo's peak shattered because of Namalyari's immense fury in an attempt to teach humans the meaning of fear and show how misdeeds will be punished.{{Citation needed|date=August 2011}}
 
According to the elders, Apo Namalyari, caused the 1991 eruption because of displeasure toward illegal loggers and [[Philippine National Oil Company]] executives who performed deep exploratory drilling and well testing on the mountain looking for geothermal heat from 1988 to 1990.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19910721&slug=1295627|title=Natives Who Worship Pinatubo Feel Its Wrath|last=Loeb|first=Vernon|date=1991-07-21|work=[[Seattle Times]]|accessdate=2008-11-22}}</ref>  Discouraging results from the wells forced the abandonment of the prospect 13 months before the April 2, 1991 explosions.<ref>Delfin Jr.,  F.G., Villarosa, H.G.. [http://pubs.usgs.gov/pinatubo/delfin/index.html "Geothermal Exploration of the pre-1991 Mount Pinatubo Hydrothermal System"]. USGS. Retrieved on 2011-08-14.</ref>
 
==Aetas granted ownership of Pinatubo==
After being driven away by the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo, in May 2009 some 454 Aeta families in Pampanga were given the first clean ancestral land ownership on Mount Pinatubo with the Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP), the government agency that deals with issues concerning indigenous people of the Philippines.  The approved and declared net land area of {{convert|7,440.1|ha|acre|lk=on|abbr=on}} covers the [[barangay]]s of Mawakat and Nabuklod in [[Floridablanca, Pampanga]], plus a portion of [[San Marcelino, Zambales]], and a portion of Barangay Batiawan in [[Subic, Zambales]].<ref>(2009-05-27). [http://www.scribd.com/doc/35827181/Aetas-in-Pampanga-Awarded-Land-Title "Aetas in Pampanga awarded first clean title of ancestral domain"]. Scribd. Retrieved on 2011-08-14.</ref>
 
On January 14, 2010, some 7,000 Aeta families from Zambales were officially granted the Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT)    covering the Zambales side of Pinatubo which includes the summit and Lake Pinatubo, officially becoming their '''''lutan tua''''' (ancestral land).  The ancestral domain title covers {{convert|15984|ha|acre|abbr=on}} and includes the villages of Burgos, Villar, Moraza and Belbel in Botolan and portions of the towns of [[Cabangan, Zambales|Cabangan]], [[San Felipe, Zambales|San Felipe]] and [[San Marcelino, Zambales|San Marcelino]].<ref>Orejas, Tonette (2009-11-27). [http://www.piplinks.org/it%E2%80%99s-official%3A-pinatubo-now-owned-aetas "It’s official: Pinatubo is now owned by Aetas"]. Piplinks (originally from Philippine Daily Inquirer). Retrieved on 2011-08-14.</ref><ref name="Preda"/>
 
Having the land title will protect them from others — including foreigners — from exploiting their land without compensation to the indigenous tribes.  In the past, the Aetas had to contend with mining companies, loggers, and, recently, tourist companies who earn from Mount Pinatubo but do not compensate the local tribes.<ref name="Preda">Valdez, Katrina Mennen A. (2010-01-14). [http://www.preda.org/main/archives/2010/r10011401.html "Aetas to receive title to domain at Mt. Pinatubo"]. Preda Foundation. Retrieved on 2011-08-14.</ref>
 
Ancestral domain titles are awarded to a certain community or indigenous group who have occupied or possessed the land continuously in accordance with their customs and traditions since time immemorial.  They have the legal right to collectively possess and to enjoy the land and its natural resources to the exclusion of others.<ref name="Preda"/>
 
==Pinatubo in popular culture==
Long before Mt. Pinatubo became famous for its cataclysmic eruption, [[President of the Philippines|Philippine President]] [[Ramon Magsaysay]], a native of Zambales, named his [[C-47 Skytrain|C-47]] presidential plane "Mt. Pinatubo". The [[1957 Cebu Douglas C-47 crash|plane crashed in 1957]], killing the President and 24 others on board.<ref>{{cite news|author=Dominico C. Moneva|title=Speak out: Magsaysay’s death|url=http://www.sunstar.com.ph/static/ceb/2006/03/18/oped/dominico.c..moneva..html|publisher=Sun Star Cebu|date=2006-03-18|accessdate=2008-03-21}}</ref>
 
==Hiking Pinatubo==
The caldera formed and [[Lake Pinatubo]] has since become a tourist attraction with the preferred route through Barangay Santa Juliana in [[Capas, Tarlac]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Trekking-Mt-Pinatubo: Inquirer.net article|url=http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/2bu/2bu/view/20100529-272636/Trekking-Mt-Pinatubo|accessdate=13 June 2012|date=2010-05-29}}</ref>
 
==See also==
* [[Active volcanoes in the Philippines]]
* [[Inactive volcanoes in the Philippines]]
* [[Potentially active volcanos in the Philippines]]
* [[List of volcanic eruptions by death toll]]
* [[Timetable of major worldwide volcanic eruptions]]
 
==Notes==
{{reflist|2}}
 
==References==
{{refbegin|2}}
* Decker, R. and Decker, B. (1997) ''Volcanoes'', 3rd edition, WH Freeman, New York.
* {{cite journal|author=McCormick, M. Patrick et al.|year=1995|title=Atmospheric effects of the Mt Pinatubo eruption|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|volume=373|issue=6513|pages=399–404|doi=10.1038/373399a0|bibcode = 1995Natur.373..399M }}
* {{cite book|title=Geological Disasters In The Philippines: The July 1990 Earthquake And The June 1991 Eruption of Mount Pinatubo. Description, effects and lessons learned|last=Rantucci|first=Giovanni|authorlink=|coauthors=|year=1994|publisher=Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS)|location=|isbn=978-0-7881-2075-6|page=|pages=|url=http://books.google.com/?id=qK3uy9oMzccC|accessdate=2009-08-15}}
* {{cite book|last=Reilly|first=Benjamin |title=Disaster and human history: case studies in nature, society and catastrophe|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=mI77lmwmVDkC|year=2009|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-0-7864-3655-2|ref=harv}}
* {{Cite document
|last= Self |first= S. |coauthors= Zhao, Jing-Xia, Holasek, R.E., Torres, R.C., and King, A.J.  |date= 1998 |contribution= The atmospheric impact of the 1991 Mount Pinatubo eruption |title= Fire and Mud, Eruptions and Lahars of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines |editors= Newhall, C.G., Punongbayan, R.S.  |publisher= Smithsonian Institution - Global Volcanism Program |place= Washington |issue=  |pages= 1126 |url= http://pubs.usgs.gov/pinatubo/self/index.html |accessdate= 2010-04-21 |doi =
|postscript= <!--None--> }}
* Scaillet, B. and Evans, B. W. (1999) ''The June 15, 1991 Eruption of Mount Pinatubo. I. Phase Equilibria and Pre-eruption P–T–fO2–fH2O Conditions of the Dacite Magma.'' Journal of Petrology, v. 40, 381–411.
* Stimac J.A., Goff F., Counce D., Larocque A.C.L., Hilton D.R. (2003), ''The crater lake and hydrothermal system of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines: evolution in the decade after eruption'', Bulletin of Volcanology, v. 66, p.&nbsp;149–167
* Wiesner, M.G., Wetzel, A. Catane, S.G., Listanco, E.L. and Mirabueno, H.T. (2004) Grain size, areal thickness distribution and controls on sedimentation of the 1991 Mount Pinatubo tephra layer in the South China Sea. Bulletin of Volcanology, v. 66, 226–242.
* Dhot, S. Mt Pinatubo Safety.
{{refend}}
 
==External links==
{{Commons category}}
{{Spoken Wikipedia|Mount_Pinatubo.ogg|2006-01-31}}
* [http://pubs.usgs.gov/pinatubo/contents.html ''Fire and Mud. Eruptions and Lahars of Mount Pinatubo''], [[United States Geological Survey]] site
* [http://volcano.phivolcs.dost.gov.ph/update_VMEPD/Volcano/VolcanoList/pinatubo.htm ''Mount Pinatubo page'']. Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology
* [http://eos.higp.hawaii.edu/education/slide_set1/ ''Weather effects of the 1991 eruption''] EOS Volcanology.
* [http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Philippines/Pinatubo/images.html ''CVO Pinatubo photo archive''] Cascades Volcano Observatory
* [http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/1997/fs113-97/fs113-97.pdf ''The Cataclysmic 1991 Eruption of Mount Pinatubo, Philippines'']. United States Geological Survey site
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pinatubo, Mount}}
[[Category:1991 natural disasters]]
[[Category:20th-century volcanic events]]
[[Category:Active volcanoes]]
[[Category:Active volcanoes of the Philippines]]
[[Category:1991 in the Philippines]]
[[Category:Crater lakes]]
[[Category:Mountains of the Philippines]]
[[Category:Natural disasters in the Philippines]]
[[Category:Stratovolcanoes]]
[[Category:Subduction volcanoes]]
[[Category:VEI-6 volcanoes]]
[[Category:Volcanic calderas]]
[[Category:Volcanic events]]
[[Category:Volcanoes of Luzon]]
[[Category:Zambales]]
 
{{Link GA|fr}}
{{Link GA|lt}}
{{Link FA|he}}
{{Link FA|nl}}
[[zh:皮纳图博火
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[[ar:جبل بيناتوبو]]
[[be:Вулкан Пінатуба]]
[[be-x-old:Пінатуба]]
[[bg:Пинатубо]]
[[ca:Pinatubo]]
[[cs:Pinatubo]]
[[da:Pinatubo]]
[[de:Pinatubo]]
[[et:Pinatubo]]
[[el:Πινατούμπο]]
[[es:Pinatubo]]
[[eu:Pinatubo]]
[[fa:کوه پیناتوبو]]
[[fr:Pinatubo]]
[[ko:피나투보 산]]
[[hi:माउण्टपिनाटुबो]]
[[id:Gunung Pinatubo]]
[[it:Pinatubo]]
[[he:פינטובו]]
[[jv:Pinatubo]]
[[pam:Bulkang Pinatubo]]
[[la:Pinatubo]]
[[lv:Pinatubo]]
[[lt:Pinatubas]]
[[hu:Pinatubo]]
[[ms:Gunung Pinatubo]]
[[nl:Mount Pinatubo]]
[[ja:ピナトゥボ山]]
[[no:Pinatubo]]
[[oc:Pinatubo]]
[[pl:Pinatubo]]
[[pt:Pinatubo]]
[[ro:Pinatubo]]
[[ru:Пинатубо]]
[[simple:Mount Pinatubo]]
[[sk:Pinatubo]]
[[fi:Pinatubo]]
[[sv:Pinatubo]]
[[tl:Bundok Pinatubo]]
[[th:ภูเขาไฟพินาตูโบ]]
[[tr:Pinatubo Yanardağı]]
[[uk:Пінатубо]]
[[vi:Núi Pinatubo]]
[[war:Bukid Pinatubo]]
[[zh:皮纳图博火山]]

Latest revision as of 22:31, 7 December 2012

[view] [edit] [history] [purge] File:Template-info.png Template documentation

Usage

The following parameters can be used to create a mountain infobox. Please remove any parameters that are not likely to be useful.

{{Infobox mountain
| name              = 
| other_name        = 
| photo             = 
| photo_size        = 
| photo_alt         = 
| photo_caption     = 
| elevation         = 
| elevation_m       = 
| elevation_ft      = 
| elevation_ref     = 
| prominence        = 
| prominence_m      = 
| prominence_ft     = 
| prominence_ref    = 
| listing           = 
| range             = 
| parent_peak       = 
| location          = 
| map               = 
| map_alt           = 
| map_caption       = 
| map_relief        = 
| map_size          = 
| label             = 
| label_position    = 
| lat_d             = 
| lat_m             = 
| lat_s             = 
| lat_NS            = 
| long_d            = 
| long_m            = 
| long_s            = 
| long_EW           = 
| x                 = 
| y                 =
| region            = 
| coordinates       = 
| coordinates_ref   = 
| grid_ref_UK       = 
| grid_ref_Ireland  = 
| topo              = 
| type              = 
| volcanic_arc/belt = 
| age               = 
| last_eruption     = 
| first_ascent      = 
| easiest_route     = 
}}

Parameters descriptions

Only the name and elevation fields are required. All other fields are optional and will not display if not present in the template or do not have any value.

Parameter Description
name Name of the mountain, peak or hill. If more than one mountain by the name exists, the article is likely disambiguated but this name in the infobox should be the undisambiguated name. For example, Mount Columbia (for Mount Columbia (Alberta) or Mount Columbia (Colorado). An elevation must be supplied.
other_name Other name for the mountain if relatively well known. For example, Denali for Mount McKinley. Quotes can be used as normal to italicize or bold the text if desired.
pronunciation Use an appropriate IPA-xx template, replacing 'xx' with the ISO code for the language. (See {{IPA-en}} for English.)
photo Photograph of the mountain. Preferably a distance shot to show most/all of the mountain rather than a view from the summit. Do not include the "File:" prefix. If uploading a new image, please put them on Commons so they can be easily used by the other language Wikipedias. If the only image available is less than 300px wide, you can use the photo_size parameter to indicate its size.
photo_size Specify the width of the photo in pixels. For example photo_size = 200 with no "px". If no value is specified, the default width is 285 pixels. A standard horizontal photographic composition will generally display well at 285px. A standard vertical composition may need to be adjusted to 180 or 220 pixels.
photo_alt Alt text for the photo, primarily for visually impaired readers. See Wikipedia:Alternative text for images.
photo_caption Description of the photograph which is displayed below. Include the month and year if known.
elevation Maximum height of the mountain. If the mountain has multiple high points, use the highest. Metres should be used first for all mountains outside of the United States and feet for those within the U.S. For conversions, use elevation_m for metres to feet or elevation_ft for feet to metres. This field is required.
elevation_ref Reference for the elevation using the standard <ref> </ref> tags. If elevation_m/elevation_ft was used, the reference must be supplied using this parameter.
prominence The clean topographic prominence of the summit. For conversions, use prominence_m for metres to feet or prominence_ft for feet to metres.
prominence_ref Reference for the prominence using the standard <ref> </ref> tags.
listing Name of a relevant list of mountains that the peak belongs to. See List of mountain lists for examples.
location Province or state first, followed by country. For USA, the county is optional but if given, be provided before the state. If a pushpin map is being used, the location will be used for the map's caption unless the map_caption parameter is set.
range Mountain range if applicable. The specific range subgroup should be provided instead of any major mountain system unless there is no applicable subgroup. For example, use Teton Range and not Rocky Mountains or Bernese Alps not Alps.
parent_peak In computation of prominence, peaks form a hierarchy: this is the parent of the peak in the hierarchy. For more information, see Line parent.
map The name of a location map as per Template:Location map (e.g. Indonesia or Russia). The coordinate fields (e.g. lat_d and long_d) position a pushpin coordinate marker and label on the map automatically. Example see: Mount Everest
label Label to be used for the mountain's location on the map. If not specified, the value of the name parameter is used.
label_position The position of the label on the pushpin map relative to the pushpin coordinate marker. Valid options are {left, right, top, bottom, none}. If this field is not specified, the default value is right.
map_alt Alt text for the map, primarily for visually impaired readers. See Alt text for maps.
map_caption Fill out if a map caption is desired. If not specified, location will be used.
map_relief When set to a non-blank value, if the specified location map template has a relief map specified, it will be used. If there is no relief map specified by the location map template, the main image will be used. The default value is 1 so that relief maps are the default. To override this and use the main image, specify map_relief=0.
map_size Must be entered as only a number—no need for px. The default value is 250.
lat_d Latitude degrees. Can also be used for decimal degrees
lat_m Latitude minutes.
lat_s If known, latitude seconds.
lat_NS N for North; S for South.
long_d Longitude degrees.
long_m Longitude minutes.
long_s If known, longitude seconds.
long_EW E for East; W for West.
x
y
Specifies the position of the location marker when the X,Y method for map display is used. The coordinates of the marker in pixels based on a map width of 1000 pixels. The template will scale these values for proper display. See {{Infobox map}} for further details.
region Either a two character ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code or an ISO 3166-2 region code. See region.
source The source of the coordinate data. See source.
coordinates The latitude and longitude of the summit using the {{coord}} template with display=inline,title. If the article uses a geolinks template in the external links section, do not use the display parameter. Note that using lat_d and long_d will cause this parameter to be ignored.
coordinates_ref For any references regarding the coordinates reported. <ref> </ref> tags must be used.
grid_ref_UK If the mountain is in Great Britain, the British grid reference. For mountains outside of Great Britain, this field is not applicable and therefore should be removed if it is present.
grid_ref_Ireland If the mountain is in Ireland (whether Northern Ireland or the Republic), the Irish grid reference. For mountains outside Ireland, this field is not applicable and therefore should be removed if it is present.
topo The name of the topographic map showing the mountain. In Canada, this is usually the National Topographic System map number while for the USA, it's the map name from the USGS.
type The type of mountain — see List of mountain types.
volcanic_arc
volcanic_belt
volcanic_field
volcanic_arc/belt
If the mountain is a volcano, the arc, belt or field in which it is situated. Each parameter displays an appropriate label.
age Age of the rock. Geologic time scales may be useful here.
last_eruption The date of the last eruption if the mountain is of volcanic origin. Only use Unknown if a verifiable source such as the Global Volcanism Program states it as such.
first_ascent Date of the first ascent, if known. Typically, this is the first recorded ascent but not necessarily the first true ascent. If it is quite probable the peak/mountain was ascended by local people before then, a footnote should be added.
easiest_route The easiest route to the summit. Some possibilities include Hike, Scramble or any of the YDS grades.

General notes

Blank starter templates for various areas of the world (just copy and paste):

Examples

A mountain infobox without a map

Mount Shasta
File:Mt Shasta from the northwest-750px.JPG
Mount Shasta and Shastina from the Butte Valley (North-East)
Elevation 14,179 feet (4,322 m)
Location
Location California, USA
Range Cascades
Topo map USGS Mount Shasta
Geology
Type Composite volcano
Age of rock Less than 593 ka
Last eruption 1786
Climbing
First ascent 1854 by E.D. Pearce and party
Easiest route rock/ice
{{Infobox mountain
| name          = Mount Shasta
| photo         = Mt_Shasta_from_the_northwest-750px.JPG
| photo_alt     = A large mountain rises in the distance over shrubs and trees, its peak covered with snow. A lower brown mountain on its right does not rise to a sharp peak.
| photo_caption = Mount Shasta and Shastina from the Butte Valley (North-East)
| elevation     = {{convert|14179|ft|m|0}}
| location      = [[California]], [[United States|USA]]
| range         = [[Cascade Range|Cascades]]
| prominence    = 
| coordinates   = 
| topo          = [[United States Geological Survey|USGS]] Mount Shasta
| type          = [[Composite volcano]]
| age           = Less than 593 [[kiloannum|ka]]
| last_eruption = 1786
| first_ascent  = 1854 by E.D. Pearce and party
| easiest_route = rock/ice
| listing       = 
| translation   = 
| language      = 
}}

A mountain infobox with a map

K2
File:K2-big.jpg
K2 in Summer
Elevation 8,611 m (28,251 ft)
Prominence 4,017 m (13,179 ft)
Listing 2nd highest on Earth
Location
Location on Pakistan/China border
Location Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County, Xinjiang, China/Northern Areas, Pakistan
Range Karakoram
Coordinates

35°52′57″N 76°30′48″E / 35.8825°N 76.51333°E / 35.8825; 76.51333Coordinates: 35°52′57″N 76°30′48″E / 35.8825°N 76.51333°E / 35.8825; 76.51333{{#coordinates:35|52|57|N|76|30|48|E|type:mountain_ |primary |name=

}}
Climbing
First ascent July 1954 by Lacedelli and Compagnoni
Easiest route Rock, snow and ice climb
{{Infobox mountain
| name            = K2
| photo           = K2-big.jpg
| photo_alt       = A large angular white mountain, with steeply sloped sides mostly covered with snow, dominates surrounding brown mountains
| photo_size      = 250
| photo_caption   = K2 in Summer
| elevation_m     = 8611
| elevation_ref   = 
| prominence_m    = 4017
| listing         = [[Eight-thousander|2nd highest on Earth]]
| location        = [[Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County]], [[Xinjiang]], [[China]]/[[Northern Areas, Pakistan]]
| range           = [[Karakoram]]
| topo            = 
| first_ascent    = July 1954 by Lacedelli and Compagnoni
| easiest_route   = Rock, snow and ice climb
| map             = Pakistan
| label_position  = right
| map_alt         = K2 is located on the far northwest border of Pakistan, next to China
| map_caption     = Location on Pakistan/China border
| map_size        = 200
| coordinates_ref = 
| lat_d  = 35 | lat_m  = 52 | lat_s  = 57 | lat_NS  = N
| long_d = 76 | long_m = 30 | long_s = 48 | long_EW = E
}}

Microformat

The articles created using this template include an hCard microformat. For more information read this.

an:Plantilla:Montañas ar:قالب:معلومات جبل be-x-old:Шаблён:Гара bg:Шаблон:Планина bn:টেমপ্লেট:Infobox mountain cs:Šablona:Infobox - hora cy:Nodyn:Mynydd de:Vorlage:Infobox Berg dsb:Pśedłoga:Infokašćik góra et:Mall:Mägi eo:Ŝablono:Informkesto monto es:Plantilla:Ficha de montaña fa:الگو:دادان کوه fr:Modèle:Infobox Montagne he:תבנית:הר hsb:Předłoha:Infokašćik hora io:Shablono:Monto it:Template:Montagna ja:Template:Infobox 山 ka:თარგი:ინფოდაფა მთა ko:틀:산 정보 ku:Şablon:Çiya lv:Veidne:Infokaste kalns hu:Sablon:Hegy infobox ml:ഫലകം:Infobox Mountain mk:Шаблон:Инфокутија Планина no:Mal:Infoboks fjell nn:Mal:Infoboks fjell pl:Szablon:Góra infobox pt:Predefinição:Info/Montanha ro:Format:Infocaseta Munte ru:Шаблон:Гора fi:Malline:Vuori sv:Mall:Berg ta:வார்ப்புரு:தகவல் சட்டம் மலை tr:Şablon:Dağ ur:سانچہ:Infobox mountain