Taal Volcano:

Taal Volcano in the Philippines reportedly erupted three times
- It is located in Batangas province about 70 kilometers south of Manila, Philippines.
- Taal is classified as a “complex” volcano by the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS).
- Taal is an active volcano within a massive caldera, with at least 38 recorded eruptions in the last 450 years.
- The caldera is believed to have formed during a series of prehistoric eruptions between 140,000 and 5,380 BCE.
- It is a stratovolcano with a crater lake on a 5-km-wide volcanic island within a large caldera.
- It does not rise from the ground as a distinct, singular dome but consists of multiple stratovolcanoes, conical hills and craters of all shapes and sizes.
- Complex volcano is also called a compound volcano, is one that consists of a complex of two or more vents, or a volcano that has an associated volcanic dome, either in its crater or on its flanks.
- Examples: Vesuvius, besides Taal.


