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Lassen Volcanic National Parkrock formation on top of diamond peak with panoramic of valley below
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Main Park Road Closed

Hwy 89, the main park road, is closed for the season at the Kohm Yah-mah-nee Visitor Center and Loomis Plaza due to snow and ice. The visitor center is open.

Lassen Volcanic National Park

To visit Lassen Volcanic National Park is to witness a brief moment in the ancient battle between the earth shaping forces of creation and destruction in Northern California. Nestled within Lassen’s peaceful forests and untouched wilderness, hissing fumaroles and boiling mud pots still shape and change the land, evidence of Lassen’s long fiery and active past.

 
 
Mudpot along Bumpass Hell boardwalk

Have questions about visiting?

 
Lassen Peak with clouds and blue sky

The eruption of Lassen Peak and what it means

On May 22, 1915, an explosive eruption at Lassen Peak, the southernmost active volcano in the Cascade Range, devastated nearby areas and rained volcanic ash as far away as 200 miles to the east. This explosion was the most powerful in a 1914-17 series of eruptions that were the most recent to occur in the Cascades prior to the 1980 eruption of Mt. St. Helens. Lassen Peak is the largest of a group of more than 30 volcanic domes erupted over the past 300,000 years in Lassen Volcanic National Park.
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steaming fumarole

Explore the Hydrothermal Areas

Hydrothermal (hot water) features at Lassen Volcanic fascinate visitors to this region of northeastern California. Boiling mud pots, steaming ground, roaring fumaroles, and sulfurous gases are linked to active volcanism and are all reminders of the ongoing potential for eruptions in the Lassen area. Nowhere else in the Cascade Range of volcanoes can such an array of hydrothermal features be seen.
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Write to

Lassen Volcanic National Park
P.O. Box 100
Mineral, CA 96063-0100

E-mail Us

Phone

Visitor Information
(530) 595-4480

Fax

(530) 595-3262

Climate

Weather plays a dramatic role at Lassen Volcanic National Park. Winter, especially, shapes the landscape; snow generally begins to accumulate each year in October, doesn't melt in most places until July, and can remain in isolated areas year round. Summer weather is more predictable, with warm, dry days, blue skies, and cool nights. Visitors to Lassen Volcanic National Park should be prepared for any kind of weather, any time of the year.
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picture of caldera inside cinder cone  

Did You Know?
All four types of volcanoes found in the entire world are represented in Lassen Volcanic National Park. Volcanoes found in the park include shield (Prospect Peak), plug dome (Lassen Peak), Cinder Cone (Cinder Cone), and Composite (Brokeoff Volcano) volcanoes.
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Last Updated: January 12, 2009 at 15:09 EST