. Earth Science News .
Indonesian Volcano Spews Ash

Indonesie, Probolinggo : Smoke emits from the tallest volcanic mountain in java island, Semeru (behind) as volcanic Bromo mountain is seen in the foreground in Probolinggo, East Java. The active volcano Mount Bromo attracts thousands of pilgrims every year. Bromo has 50 known eruptions since 1804, and in 1984 it produced a dark gray plume that rose one kilometer above the crater rim. AFP PHOTO/UGLU
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) Aug 07, 2006
A volcano in Indonesia's densely-populated East Java island is spewing ash and clouds of hot gas but scientists said Monday there was no immediate danger for those living around its slopes.

"Although visually one cannot see it because of the clouds, (Mount) Semeru is continuously erupting every 15 minutes or so, spewing ash and heated gas clouds," said Herry, from the vulcanology observation station in Lumajang, on the northern slope of the mountain.

Herry said the activity was part of the volcano's normal pattern of behaviour and there was no need to raise its alert status.

Ash spewed from the crater of the 3,676-meter (12,130-foot) volcano has blanketed several areas around the slopes in the past few days, he said.

The volcano last erupted in February 1994, killing nine people.

Meanwhile, authorities further downgraded the alert status of Central Java's Mount Merapi by another rung to "vigilance" on Monday morning, said Sapari, from the vulcanology office in Yogyakarta, a city just south of the volcano.

"Merapi has not emmited heat clouds for the past three weeks," he said.

The warning is now one step above "normal" but two below the peak alert, which scientists issue when they fear an eruption could occur within 24 hours.

Merapi was placed on top alert on May 13 and remained there for nearly the entire next two months. Two people sheltering in an emergency bunker were killed when ash and volcanic debris smothered them.

Authorities also downgraded the top alert status on a third volcano, Mount Karangetang on North Sulawesi's Siau island, on Saturday. Scientists said last month they feared an eruption when lava began oozing from its crater.

About 4,000 villagers were initially evacuated from Karangetang's slopes.

The archipelagic nation of Indonesia sits on the "Pacific Ring of Fire", where continental plates meet and cause frequent volcanic and seismic activity.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
A world of storm and tempest

India Steps Up Relief Efforts As Floods Hit Hundreds Of Thousands
Mumbai (AFP) Aug 07, 2006
Fifty-five people were reported killed by flooding in India as relief workers Monday moved thousands marooned by heavy monsoon rains to higher ground. Authorities raced to shift some 30,000 people when the city of Surat in the western coastal state of Gujarat was flooded after the Tapti river burst its banks, local officials said.







  • South Korean Emergency Aid Heads For North
  • New System Provides Power, Water, Refrigeration From One Source
  • Munich Re Fighting Fit For Hurricane Season After Good First Half
  • San Diego Supercomputer Team Backs Firefighters in Recent "Horse" Wildfires

  • Trees Appear To Respond Slower To Climate Change Than Previously Thought
  • Shoot Up And Cool Down
  • Cosmic Dust In Ice Cores Sheds Light On Earth's Past Climate
  • Pine Plantations May Be One Culprit In Increasing Carbon Dioxide Levels

  • CloudSat Captures Hurricane Daniel's Transformation
  • Senators Collins And Lieberman Write To Griffin Over NASA Dumping 'Mission To Earth'
  • Google Earth Impacts Science
  • Satellite Data Reveal Gravity Change From Sumatran Earthquake

  • Korean Scientist Makes Crude Oil Into Fuel
  • BP Pipeline Leak Closes Down Biggest US Oilfield
  • British high street targets energy-conscious consumers
  • Unaxis drives back into profit on solar panels and microchips

  • Einstein Researchers Find Key to Unlocking World's Deadliest Malaria Parasite
  • Human Behavior Changes The Number Of Strains Of Infectious Diseases
  • The Next Dilemma Stemming From The Global Aids Epidemic
  • Scientists Develop SARS Vaccine with Common Poultry Virus

  • Worker Ants Store Fat To Share With Colony Members During Times Of Need
  • Evidence Of Rapid Evolution Is Found At The Tips Of Chromosomes
  • Thieves Promote Stable Coexistence Among Desert Rodents
  • Apes - Not Monkeys - Ace IQ Tests

  • Landslides Threaten Planned Pipeline In Russia
  • At An Underwater Volcano, Evidence Of Man's Environmental Impact
  • UN calls for action after Lebanese slick spreads to Syria
  • Pipeline Leak In West Russia Could Poses Serious Threat

  • Scientists Develop Artwork That Changes To Suit Your Mood
  • Human Tampering Threatens Planet's Life-Sustaining Surface
  • Germans Set Up An Apartheid-Like Society In Saxon Britain
  • Present-Day Non-Human Primates May Be Linchpin In Evolution Of Language

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights 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