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Anak Krakatau. Photograph courtesy of and copyrighted by Robert Decker.
Krakatau erupted in 1883, in one of the largest eruptions in recent time. Krakatau is an island volcano along the Indonesian arc, between the much larger islands of Sumatra and Java (each of which has many volcanoes also along the arc). There is a very fine book about the Krakatau eruption by Tom Simkin and Richard Fiske (Simkin, T., and Fiske, R.S., Krakatau 1883: The volcanic eruption and its effects: Smithsonian Institution Press: Washington, D.C., 464 p.), so if you really want to know about the eruption you should go to the nearest bookstore or library to find that.
Here are some highlights from their summary of effects:
Scott Rowland
Recent activity
Krakatau is still active. The presently-active vent has formed a small
island in the middle of the ocean-filled caldera that developed during
the famous big eruption of 1883. The island is called Anak Krakatau, which
means child-of-Krakatau. It
is pretty much erupting all the time at a low level, but once or twice a
year it has slightly larger eruptions that people notice and sometimes
report in the news. Of course none of these are anywhere near the size of
the famous 1883 eruption.
Krakatau is following a pattern that is pretty common for volcanoes. This pattern involves hundreds to thousands of years of small eruptions to build up the volcano followed by 1 or more huge eruptions that causes the volcano to collapse into a caldera, and then the cycle starts over again.
I think the chances of a huge 1883-style eruption are very small for the time being. However, it is certainly dangerous to go onto Anak Krakatau, especially if it is one of its more agitated moods. It is probably not even very smart to spend too much time on the small islands that form the remnants of what was once the main Krakatau island. This is because even a small collapse of Anak Krakatau could generate a small tsunami that could sweep towards these islands. Since they are so close to Anak Krakatau there wouldn't be very much time for a warning.
Scott Rowland
The most recent eruption of Krakatau was at the island of Anak Krakatau in May-June of 1995. This ash-rich eruption shot ash about 500-1,300 feet (150-400 m) high. During the second week of June 2,000 explosions were recorded at the volcano.
Source of Information:
SEAN Bulletin, 1995, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., v. 20,
no. 6, p. 5-6.
Steve Mattox
For additional information about Krakatau, click here
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