UP COMING TOUR

Up coming tour

Semeru Expedition

Click here for details

Space : Available

--------------------------------------- 

From Yogya To Ijen

Click here for details

Space : Available

-------------------------------------- 

Surabaya - Bromo - Ijen

Space : Available

Click here for details

------------------------------------

click here for Modification tour

 

We have 1 guest online
Convert 

into

  
free counters
Home WEST JAVA Mount Krakatau
MOUNT KRAKATAU
MOUNT KRAKATAU PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
HISTORY - WEST JAVA

Krakatoa - the world's most infamous volcano

The island group of Krakatoa (or Krakatau) lies in the Sunda Strait between Java and Sumatra.  Krakatoa is infamous for its violent Plinian eruption in 1883, that destroyed the previous volcanic edifice and enlarged its caldera.
Collapse of the former volcanic edifice, perhaps in 416 AD, had formed a 7-km-wide caldera.  Remnants of this ancestral volcano are preserved in Verlaten and Lang Islands; subsequently Rakata, Danan and Perbuwatan volcanoes were formed, coalescing to create the pre-1883 Krakatoa island.  Caldera collapse during the catastrophic 1883 eruption destroyed Danan and Perbuwatan volcanoes, and left only a remnant of Rakata volcano. 
This eruption, the 2nd largest in Indonesia during historical time (the most violent being the eruption of Tambora in 1815), caused more than 36,000 fatalities, most as a result of devastating tsunamis that swept the adjacent coastlines of Sumatra and Java.  Pyroclastic surges traveled 40 km across the Sunda Strait and reached the Sumatra coast.  After a quiescence of less than a half century, the post-collapse cone of Anak Krakatoa ("Child of Krakatoa") was constructed within the 1883 caldera at a point between the former cones of Danan and Perbuwatan.  Anak Krakatau has been the site of frequent eruptions since 1927.

Krakatau (Anak Krakatau) volcano

Volcano type

Caldera

Location

Sunda Strait, Indonesia,

Summit elevation

813 m (2,667 ft.) / Anak Krakatau: 189 m

Last eruptions

1530, 1680-81, 1684, 1883 (Plinian eruption), 1927-30, 1931-32, 1932-34, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938-40, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1946-47, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1958-59, 1959-63, 1965(?), 1969(?), 1972-73, 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1988, 1992-93, 1994-95, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001  

Typical eruption style

Explosive. Construction of a cinder cone  island (Anak Krakatau) inside the caldera formed by the 1883 eruption. Frequent strombolian activity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  Source: GVP, Smithsonian Institution