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Bali's Mount Agung threatens to erupt for the first time in 50 years

By Richard John Arculus, Australian National University
Mount Agung is seen at sunrise on Wednesday from nearby village in Karangasem, Bali, Indonesia. The Center for Vulcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation raised the status of Mount Agung from Level II (alert) to Level III (standby alert) on Monday after increased seismic activity. Photo by Made Nagi/EPA-EFE
Mount Agung is seen at sunrise on Wednesday from nearby village in Karangasem, Bali, Indonesia. The Center for Vulcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation raised the status of Mount Agung from Level II (alert) to Level III (standby alert) on Monday after increased seismic activity. Photo by Made Nagi/EPA-EFE

Sept. 20 (UPI) -- A marked increase in the number of earthquakes happening below Mount Agung volcano in eastern Bali, Indonesia, over the past few weeks has authorities keeping a close watch on the situation.

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The latest alert issued by the national and local government agencies now forbids climbing of the mountain and orders evacuations within 4.6 miles of the summit.

Although infrequent, eruptions of Mount Agung have been among the largest of the past 100 years of global volcanic activity. More than 1,000 people died during the last eruption in 1963.

Our ability to predict eruptions has improved dramatically since this last event, so we can hope such a death toll will not occur again.

Mount Agung is one of many similar volcanoes in Indonesia and the Ring of Fire surrounding the Pacific and eastern Indian oceans. But during its sporadic eruptions, Agung has been one of the most prominent injectors of volcanic ash and sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere.

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This type of activity can have effects that are more widely felt than by just the population of Bali.

The 1963-64 eruption

Mount Agung is a large volcano with a peak 10,000 feet above sea level. The mountain dominates the landscape of eastern Bali.

The 1963 eruption was preceded by earthquakes. Then in February of that year, lava began to flow from the summit crater, eventually extending for about four miles down the northern slope. Small explosions of volcanic ash accompanied this activity.

The intensity of explosive activity developed rapidly leading to a major explosion on March 17. Simultaneously, eruption of terrain-hugging debris flows of red-hot lava blocks, ash and gases (pyroclast flows or nuées ardentes), tore down the flanks devastating large areas on the north and south sides of the volcano.

Heavy rainfall on the fragmental volcanic materials triggered flows of mud and boulders to additional flanks of the mountain. These debris flows are called lahars, an Indonesian word that has been adopted globally. Another major explosive event occurred two months later from Agung with similar physical consequences.

What is happening now?

Based on the activity that preceded the last eruptions of Mount Agung in 1963, there is growing concern that the volcano might experience a major eruption in the near future.

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There was an eruption of similar intensity in 1843, and several in the 16th to 18th centuries.

The ability of volcanologists to predict eruptions has improved dramatically in the past 50 years. A primary line of evidence is the frequency and locations of earthquakes beneath the volcano, caused by upward flowing magma.

Swelling and inflation of the volcano coupled with measurements of the temperatures and composition of gases emerging from the crater also give clues as to the likelihood of an eruption.

Eruption predictions accurate to time periods as short as hours and days, such as those preceding the climactic eruption at MountPinatubo in the Philippines in 1990, have successfully saved many lives.

So there is no need to be caught unawares by Mount Agung, providing the advice of the authorities, armed with expert assessments, is followed.

There are always practical difficulties in moving local inhabitants and curious on-lookers away from the dangers of natural hazards. But Indonesia is the most volcanically active nation on Earth, and has become expert in safeguarding the civilian populations that live on their slopes.

Wider consequences

The magmas that erupt along the Ring of Fire are rich in dissolved gases, primarily water, carbon dioxide and sulphur dioxide. As the magmas ascend to the surface of the Earth, the release of pressure reduces the solubility of the gaseous compounds.

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The increase in volume of the combined gas and magma (liquid) compared with that of magma alone is the physical process that drives volcanic explosions and fragmentation of the magma to form so-called ash. Much of the volcanic gas is discharged into the Earth's atmosphere.

There are many important consequences of this overall process, but in the case of sulphur dioxide, Mount Agung is particularly important.

By the 1963 eruption, atmospheric monitoring had developed to the point where vast amounts of sulphur dioxide could be detected being injected into the stratosphere from this volcano.

Sulphur dioxide reacts with water vapor to form long-lived droplets (aerosols) of sulphuric acid, and about 10 million tons of these droplets are known to have accumulated in the stratosphere as a result of the eruption.

Droplets can persist for months to years leading to small decreases in global atmospheric temperatures. In the case of the 1963 Agung eruption, the temperature drops were about 0.1-0.4℃.

The other wider consequence of the types of eruption that are typical of Ring of Fire volcanoes is the hazard presented by atmospheric volcanic ash.

Disruption of air traffic in particular is a nuisance both socially and economically, as experienced both locally for Bali, regionally in Indonesia, and globally.

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What next?

Close monitoring of the activity beneath and on Mount Agung will continue. Similar "seismic crises" at other volcanoes have not always been followed in short spaces of time by eruptions.

The ConversationBut in the developing situation, it is essential that the advice of the expert authorities be followed with respect to the potential hazards presented by the mountain in its present state.

Richard John Arculus is an emeritus professor at Australian National University.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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