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Mufumonk
April 13th, 2005, 09:36 AM
It's a ticking time bomb over there between this and all the seismic activity along their coast.


MOUNT TALANG, Indonesia (AFP) - A volcano spewed into life on Indonesia's disaster-blighted Sumatra island, spreading new panic after the recent tsunami and earthquakes and driving thousands from their homes.


Mount Talang, 40 kilometres (25 miles) east of Sumatra's coastal Padang city began pumping out volcanic ash shortly before dawn, prompting scientists to urge people to move away from the fall-out zone.


More than 20,000 people have been evacuated from the volcano's slope, the Antara news agency quoted local official Bustamar saying. It said the volcano's status had been raised to "beware", one rung below full-blown eruption.


Vulcanologist Gede Suwantika described Talang's activity as "serious" saying there was a risk of molten magma and clouds of super-heated gas that burn everything in their path.


"This is what I worry, that this activity will be followed by a larger eruption that is magmatic in nature," he said.


"Heat clouds could also descend, and this is what is risky as they can reach several kilometres" he said.


An AFP photographer at the 2,599 metre (8,680 foot) volcano said a narrow road leading to the mountain was clogged by people deserting the area, which was shrouded in thick fog.


The volcano issued another outburst at 11:30 am and another at 6:45 in the evening, accompanied by a loud bang, according to a police spokesman in Solok, 40 kilometres northeast of the volcano. He said the situation was calm.


Elfi Sahlan Ben, an official in Solok, told the Detikcom news website that ash was being carried by winds further down the slopes while strong gaseous odours were permeating the air around the mountain.


The volcano's activity comes just two days after the city of Padang was gripped with fear following a powerful 6.7 magnitude quake that caused only minor damage but revived memories of last year's deadly Indian Ocean tsunami.


On Monday the city's offices and schools were deserted, with many people having left the town to seek refuge on higher ground, their unease fuelled by rumours and scientific reports of another impending disaster.


A massive earthquake struck off the southwest coast of Sumatra on March 28, killing more than 600 people on the offshore islands of Nias and Simeulue -- most of the victims crushed by collapsing concrete structures.


On December 26 last year, a 9.3-magnitude shockwave from the same geological faultline unleashed tsunamis that destroyed vast tracts of coast in Sumatra's westernmost Aceh region and left more then 160,000 dead or missing.


The Indonesian archipelago sits atop a series of faultlines where three continental plates collide with immense pressure, causing almost daily earthquakes and frequent eruptions from more than 130 active volcanoes.


Though inured to seismic activity, thousands of Indonesians, particularly on Nias and Simeulue, have been spooked by the recent quakes and rumours of another imminent disaster and have sought refuge on higher ground.


Last month a prominent seismologist said he could not rule out the risk of a third big quake off Sumatra, although the exact timing of the event could not be predicted.


According to Fauzan, a geophysicist with the meteorology and geophysics agency, Talang's eruption is directly linked to the recent seismic activity off Sumatra's shores.





"Tectonically speaking, it is true that there are links between tectonic activities in the Indian Ocean and volcanic activities in Sumatra," he told AFP.

He said the massive December quake had activated Leuser Mountain, a volcano in Aceh province along the same range of peaks as Talang, while the Nias quake had sparked activity in lake Toba, an ancient crater in Sumatra.

Talang has had at least four major eruptions, all in the 19th century, and three smaller eruptions in 1981, 2001 and 2003.




http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20050412/wl_asia_afp/indonesiavolcano_050412171546

Mufumonk
April 13th, 2005, 11:05 AM
Second volcano intensifies disaster alarm in Indonesia

46 minutes ago

MOUNT TALANG, Indonesia (AFP) - A second Indonesian volcano has sprung to life after a series of terrifying quakes, intensifying fears that the archipelago's violent geological forces will unleash a new disaster.


Tangkuban Perahu, a smouldering 2,076-metre (6,933 foot) mountain near the city of Bandung on Java island, began rumbling overnight, prompting scientists to raise the alarm and declare the summit around the open crater off limits.


"There is possibility that poisonous gas may come out," said Surono, a vulcanology and geological disaster mitigation official, who said Wednesday the volcano's alert status had been raised from "alert" to "prepare".


A day earlier, more than 20,000 people fled the slopes of Mount Talang on Sumatra island, as the peak spewed hot ash after being unsettled by huge tremors from the same faultline that caused last year's deadly tsunami.


There was new panic on Wednesday as a volcanic earthquake struck Talang at 10:00 am (0300 GMT), causing many to rush out of the buildings, mosques and schools they have been sheltering in since evacuating their villages.


President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who has called an emergency summit of regional governors to discuss volcanoes, visited Talang Wednesday to try to calm some of people who have abandoned their homes.


The volcano was still spewing ash as of late afternoon.


Some 25 large tents have been pitched for thousands of residents who had fled their homes to the nearby Payung Sakaki district.


Indonesia has more than 130 active volcanoes and endures daily seismic jolts attributed to the Pacific "ring of fire" -- restless fissures in the earth's crust which cause seismic activity from Japan to the Indian Ocean.


But nerves have been sorely tested by two recent giant quakes, among the largest recorded in the past century, which have claimed thousands of lives and generated intense speculation over an impending third disaster.


On December 26 last year, a massive 9.3 magnitude earthquake off Sumatra triggered a tsunami that crashed onto Indian Ocean shorelines killing more than 220,000 people, most of them Indonesians.


Three months later the same faultline sent out a seismic shockwave measuring 8.7 on the Richter scale, causing extensive destruction on the Sumatra coast islands of Nias and Simeulue and leaving more than 670 people dead.


Thousands of people on the islands have refused to leave temporary hilltop camps, with forecasts by scientists of a third impending disaster fuelling rumours that a quake and tsunami could strike at any time.


A strong 6.7 aftershock felt in the Sumatra coast city of Padang late Sunday prompted a similar evacuation, leaving many markets, schools and office buildings deserted. Another 5.3 tremor rattled the city on Wednesday.


At Mount Talang, 40 kilometres (25 miles) east of Padang, scientists were closely monitoring the volcano's activity after having raised its status to "beware", one rung short of a full-blown eruption.


Syamsurizal, a geologist at Indonesia's vulcanology headquarters in Bandung, said that since an outburst early Tuesday, there had been several smaller explosions and ash emissions, but no signs of an impending major eruption.


Talang has had at least four major eruptions, all in the 19th century, and three smaller eruptions in 1981, 2001 and 2003.





Mas Ace Purbawinata, a senior geologist deployed to Talang, told ElShinta radio that the volcano appeared to be calming down, but the tremors indicated that molten lava was trying to force through the Earth's crust.

"The (frequency of) volcanic tremors is still quite high," he said.

EtchedInCold
April 13th, 2005, 10:13 PM
i haven't heard anything about this other than from you.

B
April 13th, 2005, 11:37 PM
It only takes the 3 earthquakes to figure out that god hates muslims.

Ryan
April 13th, 2005, 11:44 PM
It only takes the 3 earthquakes to figure out that god hates muslims.

+1

B
April 13th, 2005, 11:48 PM
i stand corrected.

Ryan
April 13th, 2005, 11:51 PM
i kneel cummed

B
April 13th, 2005, 11:52 PM
k

Ryan
April 13th, 2005, 11:52 PM
l

B
April 13th, 2005, 11:57 PM
australia gets wiped out next :bang:

Ryan
April 14th, 2005, 12:25 AM
no

B
April 14th, 2005, 01:00 AM
you cant escape it. :neener:

Hailo
April 14th, 2005, 12:04 PM
honestly you guys :shame:

B
April 14th, 2005, 09:18 PM
what?