Trader sentiment on the number of large volcano eruptions (VEI ≥4) in 2026 hinges on the historical baseline from the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program, which logs roughly 0.5–1 such events annually worldwide since 1900, yielding a market-implied expected value near 0.8 and pitting 1 eruption (46.5%) against none (37.0%). Differentiating factors include Poisson-like rarity—years with zero occur about 40% historically, while singles dominate—tempered by current monitoring of restless systems like Iceland's Reykjanes, Indonesia's Merapi, and Kamchatka volcanoes, though short-term forecasts remain unreliable beyond weeks per USGS observatories. No recent clusters or precursors signal deviation, keeping higher counts (2+) under 10% amid inherent post-eruption VEI assessments.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedHow many large volcano eruptions (VEI ≥4) in 2026?
How many large volcano eruptions (VEI ≥4) in 2026?
1 47%
0 37%
2 5.7%
3 3.3%
$622,915 Vol.
$622,915 Vol.
0
37%
1
47%
2
6%
3
3%
4
2%
5+
2%
1 47%
0 37%
2 5.7%
3 3.3%
$622,915 Vol.
$622,915 Vol.
0
37%
1
47%
2
6%
3
3%
4
2%
5+
2%
The primary resolution source will be the Smithsonian Institution Global Volcanism Program (GVP: https://volcano.si.edu/), specifically the cumulative figures for 2026 for VEI 4, VEI 5, and VEI 6 released on the page currently titled "Eruptions Avg 2000-2024 (N/T)" (https://volcano.si.edu/faq/index.cfm?question=eruptionsbyyear) as of March 31, 2027, 12 PM ET. Any prior updates will not be considered finalized.
If this dataset has not been updated to include all relevant events by March 31, 2027, or if the Smithsonian GVP becomes permanently unavailable, this market may resolve based on a consensus of credible scientific sources, including the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), national or regional volcanic observatories, or credible reporting of a scientific consensus.
Note: Smithsonian Institution Global Volcanism Program databases, which include eruptions that reached the relevant threshold prior to this market’s timeframe (e.g., https://volcano.si.edu/faq/index.cfm?question=eruptionsbyyear&checkyear=2025), will not be considered.
Market Opened: Jan 2, 2026, 1:48 PM ET
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Trader sentiment on the number of large volcano eruptions (VEI ≥4) in 2026 hinges on the historical baseline from the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program, which logs roughly 0.5–1 such events annually worldwide since 1900, yielding a market-implied expected value near 0.8 and pitting 1 eruption (46.5%) against none (37.0%). Differentiating factors include Poisson-like rarity—years with zero occur about 40% historically, while singles dominate—tempered by current monitoring of restless systems like Iceland's Reykjanes, Indonesia's Merapi, and Kamchatka volcanoes, though short-term forecasts remain unreliable beyond weeks per USGS observatories. No recent clusters or precursors signal deviation, keeping higher counts (2+) under 10% amid inherent post-eruption VEI assessments.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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