Tag: Hallasan

Picture of the Day: Snowcapped Mt. Halla

Snow-capped Mount Halla
Snow-capped Mount Halla
This provided photo shows Baekrokdam Lake, which sits at the top of Mount Halla on South Korea’s largest island of Jeju, covered with snow on Dec. 5, 2025. The 1,950-meter dormant volcano, a UNESCO-designated world natural heritage site, is the highest peak in South Korea. (Yonhap)

Picture of the Day: Snowy Mt. Halla

Winter scenery
Winter scenery
Tourists enjoy snowy scenery at Mount Halla on the southern Jeju Island on Jan. 31, 2025. (Yonhap)

Picture of the Day: Snowy Mt. Halla

Snow scene at Mount Halla
Snow scene at Mount Halla
A highland at Mount Halla, the highest peak in South Korea, located on the southernmost island of Jeju, is covered with snow in this photo provided by a reader on Nov. 19, 2023. (Yonhap)

Jeju Island Sees Snow 18 Days Earlier Than Last Year

Winter is coming early to Jeju island and South Korea:

The first snow of the season fell on Mount Halla on the southern resort island of Jeju on Sunday, as the morning temperature dropped below zero across the nation, the weather agency said.

Mount Halla, the highest peak in South Korea, experienced the first snow 18 days earlier than the one recorded a year earlier, as the temperature sharply fell, according to the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA).

South Korea was gripped by cold snaps across the nation, with the country’s northeastern Gangwon Province experiencing the coldest weather this fall.

As of 6 a.m., temperatures were minus 10.8 C on Mount Seorak of Gangwon Province and minus 7.7 C in Daegwallyeong Pass, located in a mountainous region in eastern South Korea.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Picture of the Day: Mt. Halla’s Crater Lake

Baeknokdam filled with water
Baeknokdam filled with water
Baeknokdam, an oval-shaped crater at the peak of Mount Halla on South Korea’s southern Jeju Island, is full of water on May 8, 2023, after five days of heavy rain of more than 1,000 millimeters, in this photo provided by photographer Kang Young-keun. (Yonhap)

Picture of the Day: Tulips Bloom on Jeju Island

Tulips in full bloom on Jeju Island
Tulips in full bloom on Jeju IslandVisitors walk through a field of tulips at a park in the city of Seogwipo on South Korea’s largest island of Jeju on March 8, 2019, with the 1,950-meter Mount Halla seen at the top. (Yonhap)

Picture of the Day: Snow Mt. Halla

Winter Wonderland
Climbers hike the Yeongsil trail on snow-capped Mount Halla in Jeju Island Friday. [KBS Global]

New Finding Shows That Mt. Halla Could Still Be Active

It would be quite a disaster if Mt. Halla did ever erupt considering the increasing amount of development happening on Jeju:

Mt. Halla image via the Wall Street Journal.

A July report from the Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM) surprised volcanologists by dating Jeju’s most recent volcanic eruption to 5,000 years ago. Media outlets gleefully reported Mt. Hallasan was not dead, or dormant, but alive.

The research team, led by Jin-yeong Lee, radiocarbon dated carbonised wood (charcoal) below the basalt layer at Sangchang-ri, Seogwipo City, to 5,000 years old. This was 2,000 years more recent than the 7,000-year-old eruption at Mt. Songaksan, thought to be Jeju’s last volcanic activity.

Scientists had speculated that the basalt layer at Sangchang-ri was formed 35,000 years ago, yet the carbonised wood was below the basalt, making the rock at least as young as the ancient trees. Sangchang-ri was thus confirmed as the site of the most recent volcanic activity in South Korea. (The title of most active volcano on the peninsula goes to Mt. Baekdusan in North Korea, which last erupted in 1903.)

The findings were picked up by media outlets and headlines stated that Mt. Hallasan was “alive” and not dead, a fact already known as the earlier Songaksan activity was already within the same Smithsonian Institute’s Global Volcanism Program (GVP) 10,000 year timeframe for active volcanoes. Nevertheless, the Science Daily headline, “Jeju Island, Korea is a live volcano,” typified the reaction.  [Cheju Weekly]

Here is an interesting historical account from the article:

While scientific evidence of volcanism on Jeju Island is proving difficult to confirm, one piece of historic evidence suggests that the island was active much more recently than 5,000 years ago. The “Dongguk Yeoji Seungram,” a Joseon Dynasty geography textbook (multiple volumes published between 1481 and 1530) includes this seemingly eye-witness account.

“In June 1002 CE, a mountain arose in the middle of the sea. There were four giant holes at the top of the mountain, out of which red liquid flowed and soared, and thick smoke plumed for five days. All the red liquid hardened and became stone like roof tiles.”

You can read the rest at the link.