Volcaniclastic sedimentological studies in Japan have addressed Miocene to Holocene volcaniclastic fluvial and lacustrine successions. These research approaches can be categorized into: 1) the “from volcanic source to sink” concept focusing on hydrological volcaniclastic sedimentation (including lahars), environmental impacts, and cascading processes by explosive volcanism; and 2) the “from sink to volcanic source” view, with a focus on elucidating volcanic and eruptive information such as the location of the eruption center, eruption style, and eruption age from analyses of distally deposited volcaniclastic sediments other than tephra fall deposits, despite the occasional absence of correlative eruption records in proximal areas and/or on the volcanic edifice itself. The geological records having a longer time span can reveal decadal- to millennial-scale hydrological and cascading volcaniclastic sedimentation, which cannot be assessed by direct observation in the present time. Also the distal volcaniclastic successions in sink having a continuous depositional record that can provide precise ages and the recurrence intervals of the past eruptions and eruption-associated hydrological events. Both perspectives, beyond the borders of sedimentology and volcanology, are necessary to fully capture the geologic record and to understand past volcanisms and their impacts, which eventually lead to prediction and preparing for future volcanic events.