Author: Adam DuVander

Hot Right Now: Erupting & Non-Erupting Volcanoes Mapped

Volcanoes are hot right now — or at least some of them are. We mapped over 400 volcanoes from around the world as well as their eruption statuses. Some volcanoes have been erupting continuously for hundreds of years, a few volcanoes have recently cooled off, and there are those that haven’t exploded for some time now. Each volcano can be classified by type, and while stratovolcanoes are the most common, there are fourteen other types of volcanoes to get heated over. Don’t worry if you can’t name them all just yet. You’ll soon be able to name quite a few, and you’ll successfully identify the specific characteristics of stratovolcanoes, calderas, shield volcanoes, complex volcanoes, and more!

View Volcanoes in a full screen map

Before you have a meltdown from dying to know which volcanoes are hot and which are not, know that you can easily sort the map by eruption status, type of volcano, and even elevation. After you’ve sorted the map, read on as we break down the magma-tudinous facts about some of the hottest — and coolest — volcanoes.

Longest Currently Erupting Volcanoes

The volcanoes classified as erupting have exploded as recently as 2018, and many are continuously erupting to this day. This includes the longest continuously erupting volcano: Mount Yasur, a stratovolcano in Vanuatu. Mount Yasur has been erupting nearly continuously since 1774, and its eruptions can occur up to several times per hour!

Photo of Mount Yasur by Rolf Cosar

While no other volcano can tout such long-standing continuous eruptions like Mount Yasur, there are several volcanoes that have been erupting around the clock since the early 20th century. Volcanoes like Santa María, Dukono, Sangay, Stromboli, Sakurajima, Semeru, and Shiveluch have continued to keep their lava flowing since as early as 1922. In the United States, Kīlauea, a shield volcano located in Hawaii, erupted continuously from January 3rd, 1983 until September 4th, 2018. In 2018 the eruption that began decades ago was officially over.

Where In The World Are They Erupting?

There are 42 currently erupting volcanoes on the map, six of which are located in Indonesia and four are in Ecuador. Japan, Papua New Guinea, and the United States are all home three erupting volcanoes. Much like the highest summits in the U.S., many of the U.S.’s currently erupting volcanoes are located in Alaska. However, unlike the summits, there aren’t 49. Two out of three U.S. volcanoes are located in the Last Frontier: Mount Cleveland and Mount Shishaldin. Costa Rica, Guatemala, Italy, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, Russia, and Vanuatu each have to monitor two currently erupting volcanoes, while Antarctica, Colombia, France, India, the Lesser Sunda Islands, the Philippines, and the United Kingdom have one erupting volcano to watch out for.

Thirty-four of the erupting volcanoes can be classified as stratovolcanoes, while three are complex volcanoes, three are shield volcanoes, one is a pyroclastic cone and one is a cinder cone. The differences between the types of volcanoes are a blast to learn about, so keep reading.

Most Common Types of Volcanoes

Stratovolcanoes

Stratovolcanoes are built up of layers upon layers of lava and ash, and the word “strata” actually means layers. A stratovolcano’s lava typically doesn’t spread very far due to its thickness, so it’s good that they are the most common type of volcano. Two hundred and seventy-five out of the 419 volcanoes on the map are stratovolcanoes.

Calderas

Far less common than stratovolcanoes, calderas are huge and crater-like. They closely resemble a cauldron, which makes sense because in Portuguese, “caldera” means cauldron. You can find 40 caldera volcanoes on the map.

Shield Volcanoes

Pretty much the polar opposite of stratovolcanoes, shield volcanoes have fluid lava that can travel great distances. The liquidly lava also serves to give the shield volcano its flat shape, resembling a warrior’s shield on the ground — hence the name. There are 34 shield volcanoes on the map.

Complex Volcanoes

Last but not least for the most common types of volcanoes are complex — also called compound — volcanoes. Complex volcanoes consist of more than one peak, lake, or cone. There are 16 of these unusual-looking volcanoes on the map.

Other Types of Volcanoes

Other, less common types of volcanoes include volcanic field volcanoes, cinder cones, domes, fissure vents, pyroclastic cones, maar volcanoes, somma volcanoes, tuff ring volcanoes, plug volcanoes, and submarine volcanoes. Altogether, these 10 other types of volcanoes make up just over 12% of the world’s volcanoes.

No Elevation, No Problem: Submarine Volcanoes

Ten volcanoes on the map have negative elevations. You may be wondering how a volcano can erupt below sea level. Believe it or not, there is a specific type of volcano that manages to do just that. All but two of these under-the-sea volcanoes are submarine volcanoes, and while none of the submarine volcanoes on the map are currently erupting, they have successfully shot off steam at some point in their volcanic lives. One thing to note about submarine volcanoes: because they are surrounded by water, the volcano’s magma cools and solidifies quickly, sometimes forming super-cool volcanic glass.


As you can see from the map, there are a lava different types of volcanoes that have different eruption statuses. You can make a map similar to this one of your favorite mountains to hike or even the landmarks specific to your state.

Dropbox Image Hosting for Google Maps Infowindows

Maps are a great way to visualize data, but they can never tell the full story. Whether it’s customers and prospects, houses for sale, or anything else that ends up in a spreadsheet, a map goes a long way to helping it make sense geographically. Once you’ve identified a single place on a map, it can be useful to go beyond the textual data from your spreadsheet. A well-placed image can give the location marker much more context.

They say an image is worth 1,000 words. In the case of the Infowindow (what Google Maps calls that popup box on top of a marker), there isn’t room for 1,000 words. An image, however, can help tell the story without taking up much space. BatchGeo makes it easy to create Google Maps from your spreadsheets and include images in the Infowindow.

Create and Resize Images

Before you can add images to your maps, you need to find or create the images to use. You don’t need any fancy photo editing software to do it. You likely have everything you need on your computer. Both Windows and Mac come with a photo viewing tools that have minimal editing features.

You’ll need some source images. You may have photos taken with your camera or perhaps you can find publicly-available, license-free images on Google. Either download them to your computer or navigate to where they are stored and follow these steps:

  1. Double click one of the images to open in the viewer/editor application that comes with your computer. This should open up the file.
  2. Locate the image resize option and select it. In Preview on a Mac, for example, go to the Tools menu and choose Adjust Size.
  3. Set the width the 200 pixels and make sure to scale proportionally so the images doesn’t end up stretched out.

  1. Save the file as a new name so you can distinguish this smaller version from the original.

You can repeat the steps for as many images as you need. If you have dozens or more of images, you can look for bulk image editors or resizing tools to save you some time.

Make Images Public on Dropbox

Now that you have image thumbnails, we’ll want to store them somewhere. In order to embed them in our map, they need to be available somewhere on the web. For that, you need a web server and not everyone has access or the ability to self-host their images. Thankfully, there are public cloud storage services that make this easy. Dropbox is one of the most popular. If you don’t already have an account, you can quickly create one for free.

Follow these simple steps to essentially turn Dropbox into a web server for your images:

  1. Upload your images to Dropbox by moving a folder with your images into your Dropbox folder. You can also accomplish this through the web interface.
  2. Right-click the first file in your folder and select Copy Dropbox Link. On Mac, you’ll need to hold the Control key while you click.
  3. Paste the link into your spreadsheet or another location. Just make sure you have a way to remember which image goes with which link.

You’ll repeat that process until you have a link for each of the images. Each link will look something like this:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/rndmchrctrs12345/filename.png?dl=0

There’s one more quick change to make your image available publicly in the same way as a web browser. You’ll need to perform a find and replace in your spreadsheet. Search for www.dropbox.com and replace it with dl.dropboxusercontent.com. In our example above, the image will now have a link like this:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/rndmchrctrs12345/filename.png?dl=0

Now you’re ready to create or edit your map.

Add Image URLs to Your Map Data

Turning a spreadsheet into a beautiful web map is what BatchGeo does best. You can declare some columns in your spreadsheet as locations and some as data that you want to display. Your image column is neither of these. It will take the text, which should be a web address (such as Dropbox links) and embed the image within the marker box, called an Infowindow.

Let’s say you have a list of your customer names, locations, and links to a photo of each of them. You could store it in your spreadsheet like this:

Name Address City State Zip Image
Caitlin Miller 219 W Channel Rd Santa Monica CA 90402 https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/mm1sdt66wh00b43/customer1.jpg?dl=0
Connie Dodson 445 Palisades Beach Rd Santa Monica CA 90402 https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/4yk4fcjmo6gegwq/customer3.jpg?dl=0
Ratliff Newton 250 Santa Monica Pier Santa Monica CA 90401 https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/ejkeo1t21ruqofn/customer2.jpg?dl=0


Notice the Image column includes Dropbox links using the dl.dropboxusercontent.com version. When I copy-paste the entire contents of my spreadsheet, including headers, into this simple map-making tool, it automatically produces a map like this:

View Dropbox Image Map in a full screen map

Click around and you can see the small thumbnails of my customer photos. If the tool doesn’t automatically pick up your Image column, edit your map. Choose Validate and Set Options, then Show Advanced Options.

Make sure that the correct column is listed for Image URL.

Make Advanced Maps Without Writing Code

Customer images are just one example of an image embedded in a map—and a simple example of the power of BatchGeo. There’s a lot more you can do without becoming a programmer:

There’s a lot more you can do to explore the stories in your geographic spreadsheet data. Create a map today!

The President Abroad: International Travels Of U.S. Presidents

In honor of Presidents’ Day, we mapped the many international travels of past U.S. presidents. While presidential travels abroad weren’t common until the 20th century, there is now an abundance of data from the 19 presidents who did travel internationally. One president took 140 trips abroad while in office. Care to take a guess about which of the U.S. presidents caught the travel bug and traveled internationally the most? How about the president who preferred to keep their feet on U.S. soil and traveled abroad only once? The number of presidential trips abroad varied greatly from president to president, as did the number of times U.S. presidents visited certain countries. Some countries have been visited over 30 times by past presidents while other countries have only ever been visited by a U.S. president once.

View International Trips by Presidents in a full screen map

The map shows the international travels of past U.S. presidents, and if you keep on reading, you’ll learn about the trends of presidential trips abroad, pulled from the State Department’s list.

The Beginning Of Presidential Travels Abroad

There are only 19 U.S. presidents on the map as presidents didn’t begin traveling abroad until the 1900s. Public opinion and a lack of transportation limited presidential trips abroad before the 1900s and even throughout the first few decades of the 20th century. Before the 20th century, Americans favored domestic presidential travel. However, they frowned at the thought of their president rubbing elbows with other world leaders. But, as the U.S.’s role in international affairs changed, so did public opinion. In 1906, Theodore Roosevelt made the first presidential trip abroad to Panama City. This visit sparked the international travel bug in future U.S. presidents. Each president since Theodore Roosevelt has made at least one trip abroad while in office.

Transportation also played a significant part in the increase of presidential travels abroad throughout the 20th century. Early presidents traveled abroad by steamship, which took forever. This limited the number of trips abroad U.S. presidents were willing and able to make while in office. When Woodrow Wilson made the first presidential trip to Europe via ship in 1918, it took nine days. Yet, forty years later, after many transportation innovations, Dwight Eisenhower made the same journey by jet in just nine hours.

Presidents Who Traveled The Most

Any ideas about which U.S. presidents traveled abroad the most? Here’s a hint: the top three presidential jet-setters are also the three most recent past presidents:

  • George W. Bush (2001–2009) — 140 international trips
  • Bill Clinton (1993–2001) — 133 international trips
  • Barack Obama (2009–2017) — 120 international trips

George W. Bush traveled abroad more than any other president to date. During his presidency, Bush visited Russia seven times. He also visited both Mexico and Italy six times each. George W. Bush took seven more trips abroad than Bill Clinton, but both Bush and Clinton visited 74 international locations around the world. Bill Clinton frequently traveled to Italy and Germany. He also dropped by the U.K. on seven different occasions. Obama visited 61 international locations in total, most frequently visiting Germany, which he traveled to 13 times. Obama also paid many visits to both France and Japan.

Presidents Who Traveled The Least

The U.S. presidents whose total international travels were in the single-digits include:

  • Theodore Roosevelt (1901–1909) — 1 international trip
  • Calvin Coolidge (1923–1929) — 1 international trip
  • William Howard Taft (1909–1913) — 2 international trips
  • Warren G. Harding (1921–1923) — 3 international trips
  • Harry S. Truman (1945–1953) — 7 international trips

Where do these homebodies have in common? Roosevelt, Taft, and Harding all traveled once to Panama. Calvin Coolidge only traveled abroad to Cuba. Harding and Truman both traveled at least once to the U.K. and Canada. Taft and Truman have a trip to Mexico in common. In addition to the U.K., Canada, and Mexico, Truman also ventured to Belgium, Germany, and Brazil during his presidency.

The Ebbs And Flows Of Presidential Trips Abroad

Photo by Gage Skidmore

It’s to be expected that the very first U.S. presidents to travel abroad didn’t make 100 different trips. However, after Theodore Roosevelt’s pioneering trip, other presidents followed suit, resulting in a steady increase in presidential travel abroad. William Taft traveled abroad twice. Woodrow Wilson made more international trips (10) than any other president at the time. Unfortunately, this is where the trend ended. After Wilson, Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge traveled abroad less than the U.S. presidents who came before them.

Harding’s decrease in international travel may be explained by his death 881 days into his term. However, Harding’s V.P. Calvin Coolidge served in office for six years and only traveled abroad once. After Coolidge, Herbert Hoover made 10 international trips followed by Franklin D. Roosevelt who made 52 voyages abroad. While FDR had a 12-year presidency in which to travel, Harry Truman, his successor, still had eight years to go abroad. Truman only made it abroad to seven places, though. Dwight Eisenhower then picked up the pace with 37 trips. John F. Kennedy made 16 out-of-the-country trips before his assassination. Lyndon B. Johnson traveled abroad 27 times, and Richard Nixon made 42 trips. Gerald Ford traveled less than others throughout his presidency. However, Ford was also the start of a new trend that continued until recently.

Obama Ends A Trend While Still Traveling More Than Most Presidents

Every president since Gerald Ford traveled more than their predecessor… until Barack Obama. Ford traveled abroad 19 times, Jimmy Carter 31 times, and Ronald Reagan made it to 49 places abroad. George H.W. Bush visited 60 locations and Bill Clinton set the bar high when he visited 133 different places around the world. However, George W. Bush blew them all out of the park with his 140 visits abroad. To be fair, 140 trips is hard to beat, even for Barack Obama, the U.S.’s first African American president. It’s an interesting pattern of increasing presidential trips abroad that ended with Obama’s 120 trips. But, we can still acknowledge that Obama visited more international locations than 84% of U.S. presidents who traveled abroad.

Countries With The Most U.S. Presidential Visits (And The Least)

Altogether, U.S. presidents have visited the U.K., France, Canada, Mexico, and Germany more than 30 times so far. On the other hand, there are 30 countries which have only been visited by a U.S. president once, like Bangladesh, Cambodia, Ecuador, and Kenya. Then, there are 17 countries where a U.S. president visited no more than twice. These include Bulgaria, Croatia, Cuba, Haiti, Iceland, Jamaica, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Syria, and Uganda.


If you’re on a presidential kick, be sure to check out our other useful president-related maps like presidential assassination attempts mapped and the births and burials of U.S. presidents. Alternatively, head over to our map of the places named after George Washington to see just how many places named after America’s very first president are near you.