Mount Ashitaka
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is an eroded stratovolcano in the area south-east of Mount Fuji, Japan. Its highest peak, high,Karátson, D
"Erosion calderas: origins, processes, structural and climatic control,"
''Bulletin of Volcanology'' Vol. 61 (1999), pp. 179 DF 6 of 20 Retrieved 2012-6-21.
is
Mount Echizen-dake is a Japanese volcanic peak in the area south-east of Mount Fuji. Its summit, 1,504 meters high, is located in the Susono City, Shizuoka. It is the highest peak of the Mount Ashitaka lava dome. History * Mount Echizen-dake erupted in the mi ...
, but the complex is named after its secondary peak, Ashitaka-yama, high.


Detailed map


Gallery

File:Mount Fuji from Mount Daruma.jpg, From the south. File:Mt fuji and mt ashitaka.jpg, From above File:From Mount Fuji (2961118619).jpg, From Mount Fuji


See Also

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List of volcanoes in Japan This is a list of active and extinct volcanoes in Japan. An Orange background indicates a volcano considered active by the Japan Meteorological Agency. Hokkaido Honshū Izu Islands Ogasawara Archipelago The Ogasawara Archipelag ...
*
List of mountains in Japan The following is a list of the mountains and hills of Japan, ordered by height. Mountains over 1000 meters Mountains under 1000 meters As the generally accepted definition of a mountain (versus a hill) is 1000 m of height and 500 m of pro ...


References

The page incorporated material from Japanese Wikipedia page 愛鷹山, accessed 23 April 2019


External links

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Ashitaka Yama
- Geological Survey of Japan Extinct volcanoes Izu–Bonin–Mariana Arc Pleistocene lava domes Mountains of Shizuoka Prefecture Pleistocene stratovolcanoes Stratovolcanoes of Japan Subduction volcanoes Volcanoes of Honshū {{Shizuoka-geo-stub