Intense Explosions at Mount Semeru – One Year After Unleashing Deadly Eruption

Mount Semeru December 2022 Annotated

Landsat 9 Satellite image of Mount Semeru in Indonesia on December 4, 2022.

Intense explosions at the summit sent avalanches of ash and mud racing down the southeastern flank of the Indonesian volcano.

In early December 2022, the tallest and most active volcano on Java erupted again, just one year after Indonesia’s Mount Semeru unleashed a destructive, deadly eruption. Late on December 3, a series of explosions from the summit crater expelled gas and ash that, according to the Darwin Volcanic Ash Advisory Center, rose as high as 6,100 meters (20,000 feet) at times. Intense activity continued throughout the night into the next day.

On December 4, 2022, the Operational Land Imager-2 (OLI-2) on Landsat 9 captured this natural-color satellite image of a volcanic plume streaming from Semeru at about 9:30 a.m. local time (02:30 Universal Time). Volcanic plumes typically consist of ash and a mixture of volcanic gases, including water vapor, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and hydrogen halides. In this case, a towering convective cloud, perhaps drawing energy from the heat of the eruption, has obscured parts of the plume. Diffuse ash slightly darkens the large cloud’s shadow (directly to its west) and the underlying landscape farther to the west in this wider version of the image (below).

Mount Semeru December 2022

Landsat 9 Satellite image of Mount Semeru in Indonesia on December 4, 2022.

Below and to the east of the large convective cloud is what appears to be the edge of a pyroclastic flow moving down a river channel on the mountain’s southeastern flank. These billowing avalanches of superheated ash, tephra, soil, and other debris race at high speeds and can destroy most things in their path. The eruption on December 3–4 produced several of these flows, including one that reached a length of 19 kilometers (12 miles), according to the Indonesian National Board for Disaster Management (BNPM).

Since heavy rains preceded the event, the pyroclastic flows likely mixed with rainwater and morphed into muddy lahars as they rushed down the mountain. The flows destroyed a bridge and buried homes up to their rooftops, according to the Associated Press.

The eruption has forced nearly 2,000 people from their homes. On December 4, 2022, the Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation (PVMBG) raised the status of the eruption from 3 (“siaga,” or “alert”) to 4 (“awas,” or “caution”), the highest on the 1-4 scale. The PVMBG urged people to stay at least 5 kilometers (3 miles) away from the summit and at least 500 meters (1,600 feet) from the Besuk Kobokan river channel.

NASA Earth Observatory image by Joshua Stevens, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey.

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