BY BECKY OSKIN
BANDA ACEH, TAG – Two hundred years after the biggest volcanic
blast in recorded history, scientists have ranked that the countries most at
risk of a deadly volcanic eruption.
On April 10 marks the 200th anniversary of the Tambora eruption in
Indonesia. The enormous explosion changed global climate, causing a "year
without a summer" in the Northern Hemisphere. Sulfur dioxide from Mount
Tambora lingered in the atmosphere for several years, cooling the planet and
triggering crop failures, famine and human disease pandemics in North America,
Europe and Asia.
"People were eating cats and rats," said Stephen Self, a
volcanologist at the University of California, Berkeley and an expert on the
Tambora eruption.
There is a 30 percent chance of another Tambora-size eruption
striking this century, according to a new global volcanic hazard report
prepared for the United Nations. An international team of experts, known as the
Global Volcano Model Network, culled reports of the death and destruction
wrought by volcanoes and ranked the countries most likely to face such future
disasters. The report, called "Global Volcanic Hazards and Risk,"
will be published in May by Cambridge University Press.
Indonesia remains the country most at risk of another deadly
volcanic eruption, according to the new report. To create the rankings, the
scientists considered how often volcanoes within a country have erupted in the
past 10,000 years and their different hazards. For example, ice-covered
volcanoes can unleash fast-flowing mudflows called lahars. One of the most
lethal volcanic events in the past 400 years was a lahar that raced down
Colombia's Nevado del Ruiz volcano in 1985, killing more than 23,000 people.
The report's authors also accounted for the number of people
living in a volcano's blast zone (800 million people live within 62 miles, or
100 kilometers, of a volcano, on average around the world) and whether the volcano
has killed before.
Following Indonesia on the list of most-threatened countries are
the Philippines, Japan, Mexico, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Ecuador, Italy, El
Salvador and Kenya.
However, some countries are more vulnerable to volcanic threats than
others. Island nations, whose populations must flee an eruption, are more
exposed to a volcano's deadly hazards, according to the report. By this
measure, the rankings place Montserrat, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, the
West Indies, Dominica, the Azores, St. Lucia, the Atlantic-United Kingdom
Islands, El Salvador and Costa Rica among the island countries most vulnerable
to volcanic eruptions.
On guard
Mount Tambora's devastating eruption was not without warning. The
volcano first rumbled to life in 1812. But before it awakened, Tambora was
dormant for more than 1,000 years, and many villages were clustered on the
volcano's lush slopes. Because no one evacuated before 1815, more than 10,000 people
were killed by pyroclastic flows and tsunamis.
Now, thanks to volcano monitoring, deaths from eruptions have
dramatically dropped in recent decades, the report said. But volcano experts
are concerned that fatalities could rise in the future, from unmonitored
volcanoes; from challenges in evacuating large numbers of people in time; or
from giant eruptions like Tambora.
"An eruption of that size today would certainly have major
effects on air traffic as well as atmospheric circulation around the
globe," Self said.
More than 278,000 people have died in volcanic eruptions since
1600, according to the report. Just five eruptions caused 58 percent of
recorded fatalities (this includes Tambora). Of all the deaths, 33 percent were
killed by pyroclastic flows and 20 percent by tsunamis; another 14 percent died
in lahars. Only 887 people died from lava. Another 24 percent of deaths were
indirect, of famine and disease. Ash, avalanches, lightning and other hazards
account for the remaining deaths. (Volcanoes can trigger tsunamis from
landslides or underwater eruptions.)
Pyroclastic flows are deadly and unpredictable. These flows tumble
down the volcano as fast as jet planes, carrying a mix of lethally hot volcanic
gas and rock fragments.[]
200 Years After Tambora Volcanic Blast
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
April 12, 2015
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