Bali’s Mount
Agung has been spewing columns of ash into the sky since last week. This is
almost certainly a precursor to a major eruptive event, and as a result,
100,000 people have been ordered to evacuate, and regional airports have
closed.
Officials
are also observing lava pool within the crater, which suggests that the magma
chamber just beneath the surface is depressurising. The constant tremors being
felt around the volcano also suggest the rapid movement of magma toward the
vent.
The alert
level is currently at its highest. The exclusion zone – an area in which no-one
may enter – was expanded from 6.4 to 12.1 kilometers (4 to 7.5 miles) after
scientists expressed concern about the danger of a major eruption, which will
feature extensive pyroclastic flows.
The volcano
is quite clearly erupting right now, but the apparent switch to a magmatic
phase is what's worrying researchers on the ground.
“The rays of
fire are increasingly observed at night. This indicates the potential for a
larger eruption is imminent,” the National Board for Disaster Management said
in a statement, per The Jakarta Post.
Agung has
been dormant for 50 years, and the ash columns represent the beginning of its
return to activity. This eruption was driven by the explosive release of
superheated groundwater as steam, which is a surefire sign that magma is
ascending.
Although
exactly when and how Agung will erupt more dangerously is difficult to say at
this point, the authorities aren’t taking any chances. The last major eruption
back in 1963 killed 1,600 people, but the area is far more populated these
days.
The
government is particularly worried about what some are calling “cold lava
flows”, which are technically named “lahars”.
Lahars,
whose name derives from the Javanese word for “flowing lava”, are a little like
mudslides. They’re very viscous and have the properties of particularly wet
concrete. Unlike conventional mudflows, however, they’re formed from the ashy
remnants of volcanic eruptions – and they’re far more dangerous.
Ash, unlike
plenty of soil, is often very loose and unconsolidated shortly after it’s
deposited. When rain falls on it, it mobilizes as a slurry incredibly quickly,
especially on slopes. If you get caught in one that’s moving at 36 kilometers
(22 miles) per hour, you can quickly be smothered.
Make no
mistake: lahars are often the deadliest part of a volcanic eruption. The
November 1985 eruption of Colombia’s Nevado del Ruiz demonstrated this with
grim clarity.
Back then,
scientists repeatedly warned the local authorities of the danger of the
eruption and its subsequent lahars. They were ignored, and as a result, 23,000
people died.
The
Indonesian authorities have ordered the evacuation of a record-breaking number
of people living around Mount Agung, determined that they won’t encounter a
similar fate – particularly as it's rainy season right now.
At this
point, it has to be said that predicting when a volcano erupts is notoriously
difficult. The less frequently it erupts, the less certain volcanologists can
be as to when the climactic moment will arrive. The best they can do is monitor
it, compare their data with past eruption data – if available – and give as
much warning as possible without causing unnecessary panic.
In this
sense, then, all signs point toward a major paroxysm within the next few days
or week. As always, however, there’s a chance Agung will calm down again and
we’ll be left waiting with bated breath once more.
Similar
signs were in place back in September, but that activity represented the
opening salvo in the recent volcanological activity. Plenty were evacuated at
the time but were never really in any danger.
Now
everyone’s hoping they don’t ignore the warnings this time around, thinking
it’ll be another false alarm. If they do, it’ll be the last mistake they ever
make.
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