Release Version 1
Teide is the third highest volcano in the world after the volcanoes Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea in Hawaii, as well as the highest geographical point in the Canary Islands and all of Spain.
It began to form 170,000 years ago after a giant ancient stratovolcano that was even larger than today collapsed. As a result, the Cañadas Del Teide crater was formed, of which only part of its one wall now remains, because Teide, as he grew, filled it with his materials.