April 10th marks
the 200th anniversary of Tambora's VEI 7 eruption in 1815. To mark this
occasion here is a few facts on the volcano!
Tambora
Location: Sumbawa, Lesser Sunda
Islands, Indonesia
Type: Stratovolcano
Summit: 2850m
Elevation: 9348 ft
Last Eruption: 1967
Status: ACTIVE
Details:
According to radiocarbon
dating Tambora’s first dated eruption was in 3910 BCE (± 200) years ago. Further
eruptions took place in 350 BCE and 0740 (± 150 years). The intensity of these
eruptions is unknown. The first observed and well documented eruption took
place in 1815; the largest eruption for 10,000 years.
On10 th April 1815
Tambora erupted. The eruption was a 7 on the Volcano Explosivity Index and
released approximately 50 cubic km of magma and an ash plume over 40 km into
the atmosphere during this Ultra-Plinian activity.
Devastation was caused by
the eruption; pyroclastic flows travelled an estimated 20 km from the summit,
ash fell around 1300 km from the volcano and even tsunamis were generated.
Floating pumice travelled great distances from the volcano and there were
reports of some found in Calcutta. The eruption was also heard 2600km away.
Within 600 km of Tambora, darkness dominated for 3 days.
A 6km wide caldera was left
behind by the eruption and changed the volcano’s elevation from 4300m to 2850m.
Tambora was responsible for
the largest death toll ever caused by a volcano eruption. An estimated 11,000
people died directly from the impact of the eruption and an estimate total of
71,000 people died from both primary and secondary causes.
What made this eruption so
devastating were the impacts felt globally. The release of aerosols (including
ash) into the atmosphere caused the sunlight to be blocked, therefore causing
cooling in temperature. Temperatures fell 1 to 2.5 degree Celsius in New England
and the British Isles and 0.4 to 0.7 degrees Celsius globally. This significant
drop in temperature caused widespread famine and disease which claimed further
lives. 1816 was known as ‘the year without summer’ due to the drop in
temperature which caused crops to fail.
The figure below shows an
isopach map of the extent and thickness of the ashfall from the eruption in
1815.
In April 2011, increased
seismic activity was recorded on the volcano and continued well into September
2011. Based on this activity along with an observation of white plumes being
emitted, scientists raised the alert level from 2 to 3 on a scale of 1-4. In
October, decrease in activity led to the alert level being changed from 3 to 2
and from 2 to 1 in April 2012. The alert level was once again increased to 2 in
April 2013 due to seismic activity and observations.
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