# Mount Shishaldin

- **Country:** United States
- **Coordinates:** 54.755833, -163.967500
- **Topo:** USGS False Pass D-6
- **Type:** Stratovolcano
- **Range:** Aleutian Range
- **Listing:** {{unbulleted list
- **Embedded:** {{designation list | embed = yes
- **Location:** Unimak Island, Alaska, U.S.
- **Formed By:** Subduction zone volcanism
- **Designation1:** NNL
- **Elevation Ft:** 9373
- **First Ascent:** May 16, 1932 by G. Peterson et al. (first recorded ascent)
- **Isolation Km:** 877
- **Volcanic Arc:** Aleutian Arc
- **Easiest Route:** East face:snow/glacier climb
- **Last Eruption:** July 2023 to August 2024
- **Prominence Ft:** 9373
- **Label Position:** right
- **Designation1 Date:** 1967

Shishaldin Volcano, or Mount Shishaldin , is one of six active volcanoes on Unimak Island in the eastern Aleutian Islands of Alaska. It is the highest mountain peak of the Aleutian Islands, rising to a height of above sea level. Shishaldin's magma supply is generated via flux melting above the Aleutian Trench, where the Pacific Plate subducts beneath the North American Plate. Due to its remote location and frequently inclement weather, the Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO) monitors the volcano remotely via satellite and a seismic network deployed in 1997. Notably, Shishaldin produced a sub-Plinian (VEI 3) eruption in 1999.

![Photo of Mount Shishaldin](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/01/Shishaldin.jpg)

**Source:** https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Shishaldin (Wikipedia, CC BY-SA)
