Mount Kalatungan, also known as Keretungan by the indigenous Manobo people, is a volcano located in the province of Bukidnon in the southern Philippines.
It is a stratovolcano with no known historical eruptions and classified by the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) as a potentially active volcano.
It was formally declared as an Indigenous and community conserved area (ICCA) in 8 February 2012, through a ritual known as Gulugundu by participating tribes.
Anyone wishing to enter the area must obtain permission from the Ebmegurangen (the council of elders) of the indigenous tribes, as well as follow the rules, regulations, and policies outlined by the ICCA.
[6] As a sacred environment, the regulations of the ICCA are partly based on ancestral beliefs as revealed to the Datu or Bai (male or female community leaders, respectively) and the Beylan (shaman).