Volcanic
activity recommenced in May, 1883 and continued into August, the first
eruptions appearing on the northern, Perbuatan volcano. The number of active
vents increased on both the northern volcanoes. On the 26 th and 27 th August
series of cataclysmic explosions occurred which were heard 3500 miles away as
far away as South Australia and Ceylon, was recorded as of the world's biggest
explosion the force of 100.000 hydrogen bombs, They generated tsunamis (tidal
wave) crashed ashore and devastated hundreds of town and village, reaching
almost 10 miles inland in some places. The resulting killer waves at speed up
to a 350 miles per hour and reached height of 135 feet that were registered
even in the
English Channel , 11.000 miles away
and which in the Sunda - strait area were devastating, killing more than 36.000
people. That total volume of material ejected by the eruption is estimated at
some 18 - 21 cubic kilometers, 30 km high into the atmosphere with an ash cloud
circling the earth several times. Causing "blue suns" and "orange moons" Europe and
North America . The amount of the
sun's energy reaching the earth was reduced, and in the year or two that
followed, annual average temperatures in the northern hemisphere were than
usual.
In
the aftermath of the explosion only about a third of
Krakatau remained. The northern two thirds, including the volcanoes Perbutan and Danan and
the northern half of the Rakata Volcano, were gone. In their place was a
collapsed crater (caldera) 200m beneath the sea, covering an area of about 28
square kilometer. The remaining, southern part of Rakata was left as
approximate half, cone with an almost perpendicular cliff from the summit (813
m) to the sea, providing a natural, geological section through the volcano. The
other two islands, Sertung and Panjang, were enlarged considerably (Sertung
doubled in size) by the glowing ash and pumice which smothered them to a depth
of 30 meters. On Rakata, the south and west coasts were were extended almost a
kilometer-seawards and the ash layer reached a thickness of 60 m in some areas,
although probably much shallower on the steeper slopes. Weeks after the
explosion, rain water turned into steam as it trickled into crevices and a even
month later the surface was too hot for bare feet. It is believed that all
life, plant and animal, was destroyed on the islands. Yet the three islands are
now covered in forest, and over 200 species of higher plants and 36
species of land birds have been found on Rakata in the 1980s.
At
some point in the distant past, Krakatau consisted of a single, large
volcanic island. This island was destroyed in eruptions presumably of
great violence, leaving three fragments of the original volcanic walls
in a broken
ring, or caldera, around the edge of this original island. The three
islands are now named Rakata, Sertung and Panjang. Subsequently, further
eruptions began, building up the largest island (Rakata) back into the
center of the caldera. As of 1883, the only previous recorded eruptions
had come from this big island in 1680. The islands of Panjang and
Sertung, then as now, remained dormant. Then in May of 1883, eruptions
began again on the big island, and one by one, the three peaks of the
island -- Perboewatan, Danan and Rakata -- each came into action as the
cycle of building and destruction reached its peak. Finally, on August
27th, the sequence ended in catastrophe, as huge volumes of ejecta were
hurled into the sky, plunging the surrounding region for a radius of 80
km into 57 hours of darkness. Relatively few people appear to have died
as a direct result of the ejecta, but huge numbers died because of an
indirect consequence of the eruption. As the magma chamber emptied, the
outer walls of the volcano failed, and collapsed -- repeating the
pre-historic caldera collapse -- displacing two-thirds of the island.
These
events generated a series of giant waves, or tsunami, which steepened
as they reached shallow waters. Lava forming islandsThese waves swept
across the coastal lowlands of Java and Sumatra on either side of the
Sunda Strait, killing an estimated 36,000 people and destroying many
settlements. As an illustration of the forces involved, a government
gunboat, the Berouw, was carried nearly 3 km inland and stranded behind a
small hill 9 m above sea-level (the crew of 28 were amongst those who
died). The violence ended abruptly, leaving a greatly re-shaped
archipelago. In the centre of the caldera, where there had once been a
substantial island, the sea-floor was reached at a depth of over 250 m.
The three remaining islands were greatly re-shaped, and in places
extensive new land surfaces had been created by the deposition of great
thicknesses of pyroclastic ashes where once had been nothing but the
sea. On the persisting areas of land, an average of 60-80 m of these
ashes had been emplaced. The resulting landscapes were completely
barren, and as far as can be established, no life survived. Plants and
animals soon colonized, and the ecosystem re-building began -- a story
we will come back to. Down in the depths of the earth, the emptied magma
chamber will, once again, have begun to fill, eventually creating
sufficient pressure to begin the construction phase of the cycle once
again, naturally, pretty much in the center of the caldera