Archive for November 7th, 2007

Indonesia volcano nears eruption

Indonesia’s Mount Kelud volcano has moved closer to an eruption scientists say, as a magma dome began forming under its crater lake causing boiling water to spill down its sides.

 

Soaring temperatures in the lake has also damaged monitoring equipment used to gauge activity on the mountain that has been on the verge of an eruption for weeks.

Saut Simatupang, an official at Indonesia’s Centre for Volcanology and Geological and Hazard Mitigation, told Reuters: “Increased underground magma movement has built up pressure on the blocked entrance, causing the bottom of the lake to rise and crack.”

Efforts to estimate the size of the dome, already visible in the crater lake, were hampered by thick clouds of steam.

 

The area around Mount Kelud, among the deadliest of Indonesia’s 100 active volcanoes, has been on the highest level of alert for more than two weeks.

 

Surono, one of 16 volcanologists monitoring activity at Mount Kelud around the clock, said the temperature in the lake was so great that their equipment nearby had stopped working.

 

Some 350,000 people live in the area around Mount Kelud and several thousand have been moved to government shelters.

However, tens of thousands more have ignored evacuation warnings, choosing to stay behind to tend their crops and livestock.

In 1919, Mount Kelud spewed scalding water from its crater lake, killing about 5,000 people.

 

Scientists predict that Mount Kelud’s eruption could be bigger than the one in 1990 which killed at least 30 people.

 

But the monitoring team has also said that given the unpredictable nature of the 1,731-metre volcano a smaller or gradual eruption was possible, or it was possible that there would be no eruption at all.

 

Kelud, also known as Kelut, means “sweeper” in Javanese, a reference to the fact that when it erupts, it sweeps away everything in its path.

 

Indonesia is prone to volcanic eruptions and earthquakes due to its location within a series of fault lines stretching from the Western Hemisphere through Japan and Southeast Asia, called the “Ring of Fire”.

 

Activity

 

Officials were also concerned about increased activity at two other nearby volcanoes which were spewing hot ash, molten rock and clouds of dark smoke.

 

A few hundred kilometres away, Anak Krakatao, or the “Child of Krakatoa”, fired pumice and lava onto its slopes off the northern tip of Java island.

 

Anak Krakatao was formed after a massive eruption at the giant Krakatao volcano in 1883.

 

That blast was heard nearly 3,200 kilometres away in Australia and sent surges of gas and burning ash which, combined with a tsunami, killed at least 36,000 people.

 

One other volcano, Mount Semeru, about 70 kilometres southeast of Mount Kelud, has sent bursts of ash showering down on nearby villages, coating buildings in and around the town of Blitar with a fine layer of ash.

 

No evacuations were ordered in the town.

Source: http://english.aljazeera.net/

Add comment November 7th, 2007

Indonesian festival to be held in Melbourne

Brisbane (ANTARA News) - A three-day Indonesian annual festival will be held in Melbourne, Australia, from November 9 to 12, Jahar Gultom, Indonesian Consulate General spokesman in Melbourne told Antara here by phone on Monday.

He said investment forum, trade show, cultural performance and food bazaar would be presented in the festival which was to be organized by the Indonesian Consulate General in Melbourne.

“The theme of the Indonesian festival this time is Sulawesi, and delegations from at lest 15 provincial ministrations have so far confirmed to be present in the event,” Gultom said, adding that more than a hundred Australian business makers would attend it.

He pointed out that the annual festival which was conducted for the first time in Melbourne in 2005 was an event to promote investment and trade.

On the occasion, the Australian businessmen would have a opportunity to have dialogs with Indonesian business officials from central and regional governments.

“In the investment forum, the Australian business makers will have dialogs with Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) chairman M Lutfi, Bank Indonesia (the central bank) Deputy Senior Governor Miranda Gultom, and Indonesian Ambassador to Australia and Vanuatu TM Hamzah Thayeb,” he said.

He added that the festival was supported by Indonesian students in Melbourne, Bank Indonesia, State-owned Bank Rakyat Indonesia (BRI), Bank BNI, BHP, and Garuda Indonesia. (*)

Source: http://my-indonesia.info/

Add comment November 7th, 2007


Calendar

November 2007
M T W T F S S
« Oct   Dec »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Posts by Month

Posts by Category