a dormant volcano is used to refer to those that are capable of erupting, and will probably erupt again in the future, but hasn't had an eruption for a very long time. Here too, definitions become complicated since it is difficult to distinguish between a volcano that is simply not active at present, and one that will remain inactive.
Volcanoes are often considered to be extinct if there are no written records of its activity. Nevertheless, volcanoes may remain dormant for a long period of time. For instance, the volcanoes of Yellowstone, Toba, and Vesuvius were all thought to be extinct before their historic and devastating eruptions.
The same is true of the Fourpeaked Mountain eruption in Alaska in 2006. Prior to this, the volcano was thought to be extinct since it had not erupted for over 10,000 years. Compare that to Mount GrĂmsvötn in south-east Iceland, which erupted three times in the past 12 years (in 2011, 2008 and 2004, respectively).
And so a dormant volcano is actually part of the active volcano classification, it's just that it's not currently erupting.
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Paskali damiano gwandaa @gwandaa
14 months ago
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Grouping them is difficult too because volcanoes are not a living being such that, you can measure heart beats and body temperature and then say this is a dead volcano.
There are volcanoes which were once declared to be dead, but they later on erupted violently as for the case of Vesuvius in Italy.