Posted on June 6, 2022
This is an update of my post published on June 6, 2011:
Novarupta (which means “new eruption”) is located at the base of the Alaska Peninsula. It is almost 300 miles from Anchorage (Alaska’s largest city) and about 750 miles to Juneau (Alaska’s capital city). When it began to erupt on this day in 1912, nobody knew it for a while. Alaska was not yet a U.S. state, population density was even lower then than it is now, few scientists were studying volcanoes, and there was not yet a worldwide seismic network in place. People as far away as Juneau did hear the sound of later blasts.
(Sadly, the largest volcanoes in the 1800s were super deadly. In 1815 Tambora killed many thousands of Indonesians directly and was the cause of even more deaths because so many crops and so much forest was destroyed, and in 1883 Krakatoa killed from 36 to 120 thousand Indonesians. Obviously, these volcanic eruptions were in more densely populated areas, although they were more powerful, as well.)
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