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Major volcanoes in Indonesia
This is a 'list of volcanoes in Indonesia'. The geography of Indonesia is dominated by volcanoes that are formed due to subduction zones between the Eurasian plate and the Indo-Australian plate. Some of the volcanoes are notable for their eruptions, for instance,
Krakatau for its global effects in 1883,
[1] Lake Toba for its
supervolcanic eruption estimated to have occurred 74,000
Before Present which was responsible for six years of
volcanic winter,
[2] and
Mount Tambora for the most violent eruption in recorded history in 1815.
[3]
Volcanoes in Indonesia are a part of the
Pacific Ring of Fire. The 150 entries in the list below are grouped into six geographical regions, four of which belong to the volcanoes of the
Sunda Arc trench system. The remaining two groups are volcanoes of
Halmahera, including its surrounding
volcanic islands, and volcanoes of
Sulawesi and the
Sangihe Islands. The latter group is in one
volcanic arc together with the
Philippines volcanoes.
The most active volcanoes are
Kelut and
Merapi on
Java island which have been responsible for thousands of deaths in the region. Since AD 1000, Kelut has erupted more than 30 times, of which the largest eruption was at scale 5 on the
Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI),
[4] while Merapi has erupted more than 80 times.
[5] The
International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior has named Merapi as a
Decade Volcano since 1995 because of its high volcanic activity.
Scope
There is no single standard definition for
volcanoes. A volcano can be defined from individual vents, volcanic edificies or volcanic fields. Interior of ancient volcanoes may have been eroded, creating a new subsurface
magma chamber as a separate volcano. Many contemporary active volcanoes rise as young
parasitic cones from flank vents or at a central
crater. Some volcanic cones are grouped into one volcano name, for instance, the
Tengger caldera complex, although individual vents are named by local people. The status of a volcano, either
active or
dormant, cannot be defined precisely. An indication of a volcano is determined by either its historical records,
radiocarbon dating, or
geothermal activities.
The primary source of the list below is taken from the "Volcanoes of the World" book, compiled by two
volcanologists Tom Simkin and Lee Siebert, in which active volcanoes in the past 10,000 years (
Holocene) are listed.
[6] Particularly for Indonesia, Simkin and Siebert used a catalogue of active volcanoes from the
International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior publication series. The Simkin and Siebert list is the most complete list of volcanoes in Indonesia, but the accuracy of the record varies from one region to another in terms of contemporary activities and fatalities in recent eruptions. Complementary sources for the latest volcanic data are taken from the Volcanological Survey of Indonesia, a governmental institution which is responsible for volcanic activities and geological hazard mitigation in Indonesia,
[7] and some academic resources.
Geographical groups
Sumatra
The geography of
Sumatra is dominated by a
mountain range called
Bukit Barisan (lit: "a row of hills"). The mountain range spans nearly 1,700 km (1,050 mi) from the north to the south of the island, and it was formed by movement of the
Australian tectonic plate.
[8] The
plate moves with a convergence rate of 5.5 cm/year which has created major
earthquakes on the western side of Sumatra including the
2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake.
[9][10] The tectonic movement has been responsible not only for earthquakes, but also for the formulation of
magma chambers beneath the island.
Only one of the 35
active volcanos,
Weh, is separated from the Sumatran mainland. The separation was caused by a large eruption that filled the lowland between Weh and the rest of the mainland with sea water in the
Pleistocene epoch. The largest volcano of Sumatra is the
supervolcano Toba within the 100 km (62 miles) × 30 km (19 miles) Lake Toba, which was created after a
caldera collapse (est. in 74,000
Before Present).
The eruption is estimated to have been at level eight on the
VEI scale, the largest possible for a volcanic eruption. The highest peak of the mountain range is
Mount Kerinci with an elevation of 3,800 m (12,467 ft).
|-
|
Sibayak ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,212 || align="right"|7,257 || 1881 ||
|-
|
Sinabung ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,460 || align="right"|8,071 || unknown ||
|-
|
Toba ||
supervolcano || align="right"|2,157 || align="right"|7,077 || unknown ||
|-
|
Helatoba-Tarutung ||
fumarole field || align="right"|1,100 || align="right"|3,609 ||
Pleistocene ||
|-
|
Imun || unknown || align="right"|1,505 || align="right"|4,938 || unknown ||
|-
|
Sibualbuali ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|1,819 || align="right"|5,968 || unknown ||
|-
|
Lubukraya ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|1,862 || align="right"|6,109 || unknown ||
|-
|
Sorikmarapi ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,145 || align="right"|7,037 || 1986 (1) ||
|-
|
Talakmau ||
complex volcano || align="right"|2,919 || align="right"|9,577 || unknown ||
|-
|
Sarik-Gajah ||
volcanic cone || align="right"|unknown || align="right"|unknown || unknown ||
|-
|
Marapi ||
complex volcano || align="right"|2,891 || align="right"|9,485 ||
5 August 2004 (2) ||
|-
|
Tandikat ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,438 || align="right"|7 999 || 1924 (1) ||
|-
|
Talang ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,597 || align="right"|8,520 ||
12 April 2005 (2) ||
|-
|
Kerinci ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|3,800 || align="right"|12,467 ||
22 June 2004 (2) ||
|-
|
Hutapanjang ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,021 || align="right"|6,631 || unknown ||
|-
|
Sumbing ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,507 || align="right"|8,225 ||
23 May 1921 (2) ||
|-
|
Kunyit ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,151 || align="right"|7,057 || unknown ||
|-
|
Pendan || unknown || align="right"|unknown || align="right"|unknown || unknown ||
|-
|
Belirang-Beriti || compound || align="right"|1,958 || align="right"|6,424 || unknown ||
|-
|
Bukit Daun ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,467 || align="right"|8,094 || unknown ||
|-
|
Kaba ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|1,952 || align="right"|6,404 ||
22 August 2000 (1) ||
|-
|
Dempo ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|3,173 || align="right"|10,410 || October 1994 (1) ||
|-
|
Patah || unknown || align="right"|2,817 || align="right"|9,242 || unknown ||
|-
|
Bukit Lumut Balai ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|2,055 || align="right"|6,742 || unknown ||
|-
|
Besar ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|1,899 || align="right"|6,230 || April 1940 (1) ||
|-
|
Ranau ||
caldera || align="right"|1,881 || align="right"|6,171 || unknown ||
|-
|
Sekincau Belirang ||
caldera || align="right"|1,719 || align="right"|5,640 || unknown ||
|-
|
Suoh ||
caldera || align="right"|1,000 || align="right"|3,281 ||
10 July 1933 (4) ||
|-
|
Hulubelu ||
caldera || align="right"|1,040 || align="right"|3,412 || unknown ||
|-
|
Rajabasa ||
stratovolcano || align="right"|1,281 || align="right"|4,202 || unknown ||
|}

Map showing the location of volcanoes and geological fault lines of Sumatra.
Source: Global Volcanism Program.
[11]
Sunda Strait and Java
The
Sunda Strait separates the islands of Sumatra and
Java with the volcanic island
Krakatau lying between them. Krakatau erupted violently in 1883, destroying two-thirds of the island and leaving a large
caldera under the sea. This cataclysmic explosion was heard as far away as the island of
Rodrigues near
Mauritius (approx. 3000 miles or 4800 km away).
A new
parasitic cone, called Anak Krakatau (or the child of Krakatau), rose from the sea at the center of the caldera in 1930.
[12] The other Krakatau
islets from the 1883 eruptions are known as Sertung, Panjang and Rakata.
Java is a relatively small island compared to Sumatra, but
it has a higher concentration of active volcanoes. There are 45 active volcanoes on the island excluding 20 small
craters and
cones in the
Dieng volcanic complex and the young cones in the
Tengger caldera complex. Some volcanoes are grouped together in the list below because of their close location.
Mount Merapi,
Semeru and
Kelut are the most active volcanoes in Java. Mount Semeru has been continuously erupting since 1967.
[13] Mount Merapi has been named as one of the
Decade Volcanoes since 1995.
[14] Ijen has a unique colorful
caldera lake which is an extremely acidic natural reservoir (
pH<0.3).
[15] There are sulfur mining activities at Ijen, where miners collect highly concentrated sulfur rocks by hand.
| Name | Shape | Elevation | Last eruption (VEI) | Geolocation |
|---|
| (m) | (ft) |
|---|
| Krakatau | caldera | 813 | 2,667 | 21 July 2001 (1) | |
| Pulosari | stratovolcano | 1,346 | 4,416 | unknown | |
| Karang | stratovolcano | 1,778 | 5,833 | unknown | |
| Kiaraberes-Gagak | stratovolcano | 1,511 | 4,957 | 6 April 1939 (1) | |
| Perbakti | stratovolcano | 1,699 | 5,574 | unknown | |
| Salak | stratovolcano | 2,211 | 7,254 | 31 January 1938 (2) | |
| Gede | stratovolcano | 2,958 | 9,705 | 13 March 1957 (2) | |
| Patuha | stratovolcano | 2,434 | 7,986 | unknown | |
| Wayang-Windu | lava dome | 2,182 | 7,159 | unknown | |
| Malabar | stratovolcano | 2,343 | 7,687 | unknown | |
| Tangkuban Parahu | stratovolcano | 2,084 | 6,837 | 14 September 1983 (1) | |
| Papandayan | stratovolcano | 2,665 | 8,743 | 11 November 2002 (2) | |
| Kendang | stratovolcano | 2,608 | 8,556 | unknown | |
| Kamojang | stratovolcano | 1,730 | 5,676 | Pleistocene | |
| Guntur | complex volcano | 2,249 | 7,379 | 16 October 1847 (2) | |
| Tampomas | stratovolcano | 1,684 | 5,525 | unknown | |
| Galunggung | stratovolcano | 2,168 | 7,113 | 9 January 1984 (1) | |
| Talagabodas | stratovolcano | 2,201 | 7,221 | unknown | |
| Karaha | fumarole | 1,155 | 3,789 | unknown | |
| Cereme | stratovolcano | 3,078 | 10,098 | unknown | |
| Slamet | stratovolcano | 3,428 | 11,247 | 1 May 1999 (1) | |
| Dieng | complex volcano | 2,565 | 8,415 | 31 December 1996 (1) | |
| Sundoro | stratovolcano | 3,136 | 10,289 | 29 October 1971 (2) | |
| Sumbing | stratovolcano | 3,371 | 11,060 | 1730 (1) | |
| Ungaran | stratovolcano | 2,050 | 6,726 | unknown | |
| Telomoyo | stratovolcano | 1,894 | 6,214 | unknown | |
| Merbabu | stratovolcano | 3,145 | 10,318 | 1797 (2) | |
| Merapi | stratovolcano | 2,968 | 9,738 | 15 May 2006[16] | |
| Muria | stratovolcano | 1,625 | 5,331 | 160 BC ± 30 years | |
| Lawu | stratovolcano | 3,265 | 10,712 | 28 November 1885 (1) | |
| Wilis | stratovolcano | 2,563 | 8,409 | unknown | |
| Kelut | stratovolcano | 1,731 | 5,679 | 10 February 1990 (4) | |
| Kawi-Butak | stratovolcano | 2,651 | 8,698 | unknown | |
| Arjuno-Welirang | stratovolcano | 3,339 | 10,955 | 15 August 1952 (0) | |
| Penanggungan | stratovolcano | 1,653 | 5,423 | unknown | |
| Malang Plain | maar | 680 | 2,231 | unknown | |
| Semeru | stratovolcano | 3,676 | 12,060 | 1967–2006 continuing (3) | |
| Tengger | stratovolcano | 2,329 | 7,641 | 8 June 2004 (2) | |
| Lamongan | stratovolcano | 1,651 | 5,417 | 5 February 1898 (2) | |
| Lurus | complex volcano | 539 | 1,768 | unknown | |
| Iyang-Argapura | complex volcano | 3,088 | 10,131 | unknown | |
| Raung | stratovolcano | 3,332 | 10,932 | 2 June 2002 (2) | |
| Ijen | stratovolcano | 2,799 | 9,183 | 28 June 1999 (1) | |
| Baluran | stratovolcano | 1,247 | 4,091 | unknown | |

Semeru,
Java's highest volcano, which has been erupting since 1967.
Source: Global Volcanism Program.
[17][18]
Lesser Sunda Islands
The
Lesser Sunda Islands is a small
archipelago which, from west to east, consists of
Bali,
Lombok,
Sumbawa,
Flores,
Sumba and the
Timor islands; all are located at the edge of the
Australian continental shelf. Volcanoes in the area are formed because of
oceanic crusts and the movement of the shelf itself.
[19] Some volcanoes completely form an island, for instance, the
Sangeang Api island.
Mount Tambora, on Sumbawa island, erupted on
5 April 1815, with a scale 7 on the
VEI and is considered the most violent eruption in recorded history.
| Name | Shape | Elevation | Last eruption (VEI) | Geolocation |
|---|
| (m) | (ft) |
|---|
| Merbuk | tba | 1,386 | 4,547 | unknown | - |
| Bratan | caldera | 2,276 | 7,467 | unknown | |
| Batur | caldera | 1,717 | 5,633 | 15 March 1999 (1) | |
| Agung | stratovolcano | 3,142 | 10,308 | 18 February 1963 (5) | |
| Rinjani | stratovolcano | 3,726 | 12,224 | 1 October 2004 (2) | |
| Tambora | stratovolcano | 2,850 | 9,350 | 1967 ± 20 years (0) | |
| Sangeang Api | complex volcano | 1,949 | 6,394 | 30 July 1985 (3) | |
| Wai Sano | caldera | 903 | 2,963 | unknown | |
| Poco Leok | unknown | 1,675 | 5,495 | unknown | |
| Ranakah | lava dome | 2,100 | 6,890 | March 1991 (1) | |
| Inierie | stratovolcano | 2,245 | 7,365 | 8050 BC | |
| Inielika | complex volcano | 1,559 | 5,115 | 11 January 2001 (2) | |
| Ebulobo | stratovolcano | 2,124 | 6,969 | 27 February 1969 (2) | |
| Iya | stratovolcano | 637 | 2,090 | 27 January 1969 (3) | |
| Sukaria | caldera | 1,500 | 4,921 | unknown | |
| Ndete Napu | fumarole | 750 | 2,461 | unknown | |
| Kelimutu | complex volcano | 1,639 | 5,377 | 3 June 1968 (1) | |
| Paluweh | stratovolcano | 875 | 2,871 | 3 February 1985 (1) | |
| Egon | stratovolcano | 1,703 | 5,587 | 6 February 2005 (1) | |
| Ilimuda | stratovolcano | 1,100 | 3,609 | unknown | |
| Lewotobi | stratovolcano | 1,703 | 5,587 | 30 May 2003 (2) | |
| Leroboleng | complex volcano | 1,117 | 3,665 | 26 June 2003 (3) | |
| Riang Kotang | fumarole | 200 | 656 | unknown | |
| Iliboleng | stratovolcano | 1,659 | 5,443 | June 1993 (1) | |
| Lewotolo | stratovolcano | 1,423 | 4,669 | 15 December 1951 (2) | |
| Ililabalekan | stratovolcano | 1,018 | 3,340 | unknown | |
| Iliwerung | complex volcano | 1,018 | 3,340 | 22 May 1999 (0) | |
| Batu Tara | stratovolcano | 748 | 2,454 | 1847 (2) | |
| Sirung | complex volcano | 862 | 2,828 | 1970 (2) | |
| Yersey | submarine | -3,800 | -12,467 | unknown | |

One of three different colored lakes of
Kelimutu.
Source: Global Volcanism Program.
[20]
Banda Sea
The
Banda Sea in the south of the
Molucca archipelago includes a small
group of islands. Three major
tectonic plates beneath the sea,
Eurasian,
Pacific and
Indo-Australian plates, have been converging since the
Mesozoic epoch.
[21] Volcanoes in the Banda Sea are mainly
islands, but some are
submarine volcanoes.
Source: Global Volcanism Program.
[22]
Sulawesi and Sangihe Islands
Four
peninsulas dominate the shape of
Sulawesi island (formerly known as
Celebes). The central part is high mountaineous area, but mostly non-volcanic. Active volcanoes are found in the northern peninsula and continuously stretches to the north to
Sangihe Islands. The Sangihe Islands marks the border with
Philippines.
| Name | Shape | Elevation | Last eruption (VEI) | Geolocation |
|---|
| (m) | (ft) |
|---|
| Colo | stratovolcano | 507 | 1,663 | 18 July 1983 (4) | |
| Ambang | complex volcano | 1,795 | 5,890 | 1845 ± 5 years | |
| Soputan | stratovolcano | 1,784 | 5,853 | 26 December 2006 (1) | |
| Sempu | caldera | 1,549 | 5,082 | unknown | |
| Tondano | caldera | 1,202 | 3,944 | unknown | |
| Lokon-Empung | stratovolcano | 1,580 | 5,184 | 23 September 2003 (3) | |
| Mahawu | stratovolcano | 1,324 | 4,344 | 16 November 1977 (0) | |
| Klabat | stratovolcano | 1,995 | 6,545 | unknown | |
| Tongkoko | stratovolcano | 1,149 | 3,770 | 1880 (1) | |
| Ruang | stratovolcano | 725 | 2,379 | 25 September 2002 (4) | |
| Karangetang | stratovolcano | 1,784 | 5,853 | 2 April 2005 (2) | |
| Banua Wuhu | submarine | -5 | -16.5 | 18 July 1919 (3) | |
| Awu | stratovolcano | 1,320 | 4,331 | 2 June 2004 (2) | |
| Submarine 1922 | submarine | -5,000 | -16,404 | unknown | |
Source: Global Volcanism Program.
[23][24]
Halmahera
Halmahera island in the north of
Molucca archipelago has been formed by the movement of three
tectonic plates resulting in two intersecting mountain ranges, which form four rocky peninsulas separated by three deep bays. A
volcanic arc stretches from north to south in the west side of Halmahera, some of which are
volcanic islands, for instance,
Gamalama and
Tidore. Gamalama's island name is
Ternate and it has been the center for
spice trading since the
Portuguese Empire opened a
fort in 1512. Due to its location as the center for spice trading during the
Age of Discovery, historical records of volcanic eruptions in Halmahera have been available as far back as the early sixteenth century.
| Name | Shape | Elevation | Last eruption (VEI) | Geolocation |
|---|
| (m) | (ft) |
|---|
| Tarakan | pyroclastic cone | 318 | 1,043 | unknown | |
| Dukono | complex volcano | 1,335 | 4,380 | 13 August 1933 (3) | |
| Tobaru | unknown | 1,035 | 3,396 | unknown | |
| Ibu | stratovolcano | 1,325 | 4,347 | May 2005 (0) | |
| Gamkonora | stratovolcano | 1,635 | 5,364 | 9 July 2007 (?) | |
| Todoko-Ranu | caldera | 979 | 3,212 | unknown | |
| Jailolo | stratovolcano | 1,130 | 3,707 | unknown | |
| Hiri | stratovolcano | 630 | 2,067 | unknown | |
| Gamalama | stratovolcano | 1,715 | 5,627 | 31 July 2003 (2) | |
| Tidore | stratovolcano | 1,730 | 5,676 | unknown | |
| Mare | stratovolcano | 308 | 1,010 | unknown | |
| Moti | stratovolcano | 950 | 3,117 | unknown | |
| Makian | stratovolcano | 1,357 | 4,452 | 29 July 1988 (3) | |
| Tigalalu | stratovolcano | 422 | 1,385 | unknown | |
| Amasing | stratovolcano | 1,030 | 3,379 | unknown | |
| Bibinoi | stratovolcano | 900 | 2,953 | unknown | |

Depiction of
Gamalama erupting in the early 1700's with a Portuguese fort shown.
Source: Global Volcanism Program.
[25]
Major eruptions
Below is a list of selected major eruptions of volcanoes in Indonesia, sorted chronologically by the starting date of the eruption. Only eruptions with scale 3 or above on
VEI are given with known sources and fatalities, except if smaller scale eruptions resulted some fatalities.
| Eruption date | Volcano | Cessation date | VEI | Characteristics | Tsunami | Tephra volume | Fatality | Sources |
|---|
| 20 Jan 1992 | Merapi | 19 Oct 2002 | 2 | cv,pf,ld,lm | no | N/A | 66 | |
| 10 Feb 1990 | Kelut | Mar 1990 | 4 | cv,cl,pf,ph,ld,lm | no | 0.13 km³ | 35 | [26] |
| 18 Jul 1983 | Colo | Dec 1983 | 4 | cv,pf,ph | no | N/A | 0 | |
| 5 Apr 1982 | Galunggung | 8 Jan 1983 | 4 | cv,pf,lf,lm | no | > 0.37 km³ | 68 | [27][28] |
| 6 Oct 1972 | Merapi | Mar 1985 | 2 | cv,pf,lf,ld,lm | no | 0.021 km³ | 29 | |
| 26 Apr 1966 | Kelut | 27 Apr 1966 | 4 | cv,cl,pf,lm | no | 0.089 km³ | 212 | |
| 17 Mar 1963 | Agung | 27 Jan 1964 | 5 | cv,pf,lf,lm | no | 1 km³ | 1,148 | [29] |
| 31 Aug 1951 | Kelut | 31 Aug 1951 | 4 | cv,cl,pf,lm | no | 0.2 km³ | 7 | |
| 25 Nov 1930 | Merapi | Sep 1931 | 3 | cv,rf,pf,lf,ld,lm | no | 0.0017 km³ | 1,369 | |
| 19 May 1919 | Kelut | 20 May 1919 | 4 | cv,cl,pf,lm | no | 0.19 km³ | 5,110 | |
| 7 Jun 1892 | Awu | 12 Jun 1892 | 3 | cv,pf,lm | yes | N/A | 1,532 | [30] |
| 26 Aug 1883 | Krakatau | Feb 1884 | 6 | cv,se,pf,fa,lm,cc | 15–42 m | 5–8.5 km³ | 36,600 | [31] |
| 15 Apr 1872 | Merapi | 21 Apr 1872 | 4 | cv,pf | no | 0.33 km³ | 200 | |
| 2 Mar 1856 | Awu | 17 Mar 1856 | 3 | cv,pf,lm | yes | 0.51±0.50 km³ | 2,806 | |
| 8 Oct 1822 | Galunggung | Dec 1822 | 5 | cv,pf,ld,lm | no | > 1 km³ | 4,011 | |
| 10 Apr 1815 | Mount Tambora | 15 Jul 1815 | 7 | cv,pf,cc | 1–2 m | 160 km³ | > 71,000 | [32] |
| 6 Aug 1812 | Awu | 8 Aug 1812 | 4 | cv,pf,lm | no | 0.55±0.50 km³ | 963 | |
| 12 Aug 1772 | Papandayan | 12 Aug 1772 | 3 | cv,ph | no | N/A | 2,957 | [33] |
| 4 Aug 1672 | Merapi | unknown | 3 | cv,pf,lm | no | N/A | 3,000 | |
| 1586 | Kelut | unknown | 5 | cf,cl,lm | no | > 1 km³ | 10,000 | |
| ≈ 74,000 BP | Toba | unknown | 8 | pf,lf,cc | likely | 2,800 km³ | near extinction of human population | |
Fatality numbers are mostly taken from the Volcanological Survey of Indonesia,
and Tanguy et al (1998).
[34]Notes: cv=central vent eruption, pf=
pyroclastic flows, lf=
lava flows, lm=
lahar mudflows, cl=
crater lake eruption, ph=
phreatic eruption, ld=
lava dome extrusion, cc=
caldera collapse, se=
submarine eruption, fa=
fumarole activity, rf=radial fissure eruption.
See also
★
Indonesia
★
List of volcanoes
★
List of Indonesian earthquakes
References
General references
# ^
# ^
Volcanoes of the World: A Regional Directory, Gazetteer, and Chronology of Volcanism During the Last 10,000 Years, Tom Simkin and Lee Siebert, , , Geoscience Press, , ISBN 0945005121
Notes
1. Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded: August 27, 1883, , Simon, Winchester, HarperCollins, , ISBN 0-06-621285-5
2. Limited global change due to the largest known Quaternary eruption, Toba ≈74 kyr BP?, , C., Oppenheimer, Quarternary Science Reviews,
3. The Great Tambora Eruption in 1815 and Its Aftermath, , Richard B., Stothers, Science,
4. Kelut Eruptive History
5. Merapi Eruptive History
6. Summary Data Criteria
7. Centre of Volcanology & Geological Hazard Mitigation
8. The Sumatra subduction zone: A case for a locked fault zone extending into the mantle, Simoes, M., Avouac, J.P., Cattin, R., Henry, P., , , Journal of Geophysical Research,
9. Plate-boundary deformation associated with the great Sumatra-Andaman earthquake, Subarya, C., Chlieh, M., Prawirodirdjo, L., Avouac, J.P., Bock, Y., Sieh, K., Meltzner, A., Natawidjaja, D.H., McCaffrey, R., , , Nature,
10. The Great Sumatra-Andaman Earthquake of 26 December 2004, Lay, T., Kanamori, H., Ammon, C., Nettles, M., Ward, S., Aster, R., Beck, S., Bilek, S., Brudzinski, M., Butler, R., DeShon, H., Ekstrom, G., , , Science,
11. Volcanoes of Indonesia - Sumatra
12. Anak Krakatau and old Krakatau: a reply, , R. J., Whittaker, GeoJournal,
13. Semeru Weekly Reports
14. Decade Volcano Update, International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior, , , Bulletin of Volcanology,
15. Natural Pollution Caused by the Extremely Acid Crater Lake Kawah Ijen, East Java, Indonesia, Ansje Löhr, Thom Bogaard, Alex Heikens, Martin Hendriks, Sri Sumarti, Manfred van Bergen, Kees C.A.M. van Gestel, Nico van Straalen, Pieter Vroonand, and Budi Widianarko, , , Environmental Science and Pollution Research,
16. Mount Merapi Erupts
17. Volcanoes of Indonesia - Krakatau
18. Volcanoes of Indonesia - Java
19. Exploration in the Lesser Sunda Islands, H. A. Brouwer, , , The Geographical Journal,
20. Volcanoes of Indonesia - Lesser Sunda Islands
21. A Neogene back-arc origin for the Banda Sea basins: geochemical and geochronological constraints from the Banda ridges (East Indonesia), Christian Honthaasa, Jean-Pierre Réhaulta, René C. Maurya, Hervé Bellona, Christophe Hémonda, Jacques-André Maloda, Jean-Jacques Cornéeb, Michel Villeneuveb, Joseph Cottena, Safri Burhanuddinc, Hervé Guilloud and Nicolas Arnaud, , , Tectonophysics,
22. Volcanoes of Indonesia - Banda Sea
23. Volcanoes of Indonesia - Sulawesi
24. Volcanoes of Indonesia - Sangihe Islands
25. Volcanoes of Indonesia - Halmahera
26. Large Holocene Eruptions
27. Galunggung: the 1982-1983 eruption, Katili, J.A. and Sudradjat, A., , , Volcanology Survei Indonesia,
28. Galunggung, Java, Indonesia
29. Historic eruptions of Tambora (1815), Krakatau (1883), and Agung (1963), their stratospheric aerosols, and climatic impact, Michael R. Rampino and Stephen Self, , , Quaternary Research,
30. Awu's Eruptive History
31. Simulation of the trans-oceanic tsunami propagation due to the 1883 Krakatau volcanic eruption, B.H. Choi, E. Pelinovsky, K.O. Kim and J.S. Lee, , , Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences,
32. Climatic, environmental and human consequences of the largest known historic eruption: Tambora volcano (Indonesia) 1815, , Clive, Oppenheimer, Progress in Physical Geography,
33. The Deadliest Eruptions
34. Victims from volcanic eruptions: a revised database, J.-C. Tanguy, Ch. Ribière, A. Scarth and W.S. Tjetjep, , , Bulletin of Volcanology,
External links
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Volcanological Survey Indonesia
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Tectonics of Indonesia