
A new eruption at Barren Island was first noticed by the Indian Navy on 20 December 1994. A team composed of scientists from the Geological and Zoological surveys of India arrived at the island early on 24 January, and an aerial survey over the volcano was made on the 31st. As of 22 February, this Strombolian eruption was still "in its initial stage, gradually gaining momentum." Vegetation in the path of the advancing lava flow has been destroyed.

Liquid lava emission was volumetrically minor; most of the eruptive products consisted of cinder and volcanic bombs. Incandescent material rising to heights of 20 m could be seen from 4 km offshore. Particles ranged in size from a few cubic centimeters to ~1 m3, with the average size being slightly less than 10 cm3. Ejecta filled the pre-existing valley, located S of the western- most 1991 lava bed, from which lava flows travelled ~1.5 km from the active vents into the sea, producing profuse steaming at the ocean entry. The moving lava front was ~50 m wide and 6 m thick by 22 February. Megascopically the lava was basaltic andesite, similar to that erupted during September 1991, with a high percentage of large plagioclase phenocrysts and frequent olivine in a dark-gray glassy groundmass.
On 9 March at around 0530 GMT astronauts on the Space Shuttle noticed a small plume rising from Barren Island. A short video recording (~15 seconds) showed a "V" shaped plume that extended for ~3 km before dispersing. Visible imagery from the NOAA-14 (at 0730 GMT) and GMS (0430-0830 GMT) satellites failed to reveal a volcanic plume.
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"A Pictorial Monograph of the Barren Island Volcano: The Lone Active Volcano in the Indian Subcontinent" Ravi Shanker, D. Haldar, A. Absar and S.C. Chakraborty. Kolkata, Geological Survey of India, 2001, 88 p., (Spl. Publication No. 67) from Vedams eBooks (P) Ltd
Information Contacts:
Director General, Geological Survey of India, 27 Jawaharlal Nehru Road, Calcutta - 700016, India;
Cindy Evans,Space Shuttle Earth Observations Office, Mail Code C102, Lockheed Engineering & Sciences, P.O. Box 58561, Houston, TX 77258 USA (Email: evans@sn.dnet.nasa.gov);
Jim Lynch, NOAA/NESDIS Synoptic Analysis Branch, Room 401, 5200 Auth Road, Camp Springs, MD 20746 USA. Other Sources of Information:
Simkin, T., and Siebert, L., 1994, Volcanoes of the World: Geoscience Press, Tucson, Arizona, 349 p.
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