. Earth Science News .
Ash blankets town near Indonesian volcano

File image of Mount Kelut.
by Staff Writers
Blitar, Indonesia (AFP) Nov 5, 2007
A thin layer of ash blanketed a town in the shadow of a simmering volcano in Indonesia's East Java on Monday causing panic, but it came from a second volcano kilometres away, officials said.

The town of Blitar is located outside a 10-kilometre danger zone around the peak of Mount Kelut, where officials predict a powerful and potentially devastating eruption might occur at any time.

Its residents initially feared the worst when ash drifted over the town, Blitar district spokesman Sukamtono said.

"We have checked with the volcano monitoring team, and they say that the ash does not come from Kelut, but from Semeru," he told AFP, referring to a volcano about 90 kilometres (55 miles) away.

Semeru has been spewing ash on and off for months, scientists saying that the volcano's activities were still considered normal and not dangerous.

Meanwhile scientists said they were baffled by the behaviour of Kelut, with the energy surging inside it surpassing that of its last eruption, in 1990.

Scientists abandoned their monitoring posts on Kelut's slopes on Saturday when tremors became so strong they could no longer be measured. They could not see the peak through heavy cloud but said they believed it was erupting. However they later found that it had not.

Volcanologist Agus Budianto said that pressure inside Kelut was three to four times as strong as that which caused the last eruption, which killed 34 people.

That eruption created a blockage that magma has not been able to fully break through, lifting only some volcanic material under the crater lake and resulting in a column of steam rising from its surface, he said.

"All indications point to an eruption, but the fact is, there has so far been only a partial lifting of the lava dome at the top, as well as a strong drift of heated winds upwards," Budianto said.

The lifting of a portion of the crater to the south-southwest -- the direction evacuation efforts have focused on -- has resulted in water mixed with volcanic material gushing down the usually dry Bladak river bed.

Cracks resulting from the crust movements were providing an escape route for magmatic gases, he said, gradually reducing the pressure inside -- and meaning that it was possible no eruption would occur.

Underground tremors however were ongoing, he said, while the temperature of the crater lake has soared to 77.5 degrees Centigrade (172 degrees Fahrenheit), compared to 40 degrees when it erupted in 1990.

"This is something entirely new for Kelut," Budianto said.

A group of journalists who sneaked to the edge of the crater on Monday said that the lake had turned whitish and bubbles were forming every two minutes or so on its surface. A strong sulfuric odour also permeated the peak, though birds remained in the area, they said.

Authorities sealed off the mountain and tried to evacuate all 130,000 people living in the danger zone since it was put on high alert on October 16.

Many however have either refused to leave or returned to their homes and fields during the day to work.

Since records Mount Kelut has claimed more than 15,000 lives, including an estimated 10,000 in a catastrophic 1586 eruption. A 1919 eruption spewed heat clouds that killed 5,160 people.

Indonesia sits on the so-called Pacific "Ring of Fire" where several continental plates collide, causing frequent seismic and volcanic activity.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Indonesia volcano eruption imminent despite false alarm: scientist
Blitar, Indonesia (AFP) Nov 4, 2007
A day after a false alarm on Indonesia's Mount Kelut led to panic among residents on its slopes, the volcano is showing signs of an imminent eruption, a scientist said Sunday.







  • Anger rises in flood-stricken southern Mexico
  • Hungry Mexico flood victims turn to looting
  • Northrop Grumman Wins Two Contracts For AN/APN-241 Radar Program
  • Triage Study Challenges Notions of Emergency Medical Response To Disaster

  • Drought in southeast US fuels battle over water resources
  • Climate controversy heats up Australian election
  • Like It Or Not, Uncertainty And Climate Change Go Hand-In-Hand
  • White House defends 'health benefits' of climate change

  • Vacation Photos Create 3D Models Of World Landmarks
  • NASA Data May Help Improve Estimates Of A Hurricane's Punch
  • DMCii Satellite Imaging Helps Dramatically Reduce Deforestation Of Amazon Basin
  • NASA Views Southern California Fires And Winds

  • Russian Tankers Heading For The Arctic
  • Deal On Oil Pipeline Leg To China Won't Be Reached In Moscow
  • Analysis: Chinese arms and African oil
  • EU debates common energy strategy

  • Deadly HIV-TB co-epidemic sweeps sub-Saharan Africa: report
  • Northwestern Exposing Most Deadly Infectious Diseases In 3D
  • Staph-Killing Properties Of Clay Investigated
  • AIDS stunting southern Africa's prospects: Malawi president

  • Earliest Birds Acted More Like Turkeys Than Common Cuckoos
  • Scientists Find Risk Distribution Law For Evolution
  • Divers Find New Species In Aleutians
  • Flying Lemurs Are The Closest Relatives Of Primates

  • Cairo tries to escape life under a black cloud
  • Massive pollution in Yangtze river can be reversed: scientists
  • US Faces Burning Emissions Issue
  • Birth defects soar in polluted China

  • Computers Learn Art Appreciation
  • Research Project May Revolutionize Apparel Industry
  • World Toilet Summit opens in India
  • Europeans face mob anger over child 'abductions' in Chad

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement