Você está na página 1de 8

Majalah Geologi Indonesia, Vol. 26 No.

2 Agustus 2011: 65-71

Effects of the 1815 Tambora Eruption


to the Atmosphere and Climate

Dampak Erupsi Tambora 1815


terhadap Atmosfir dan Iklim

Igan S. Sutawidjaja

Geological Agency, Jln. Diponegoro 57 Bandung

ABSTRACT
The eruption of Tambora Volcano on the island of Sumbawa in 1815 is generally considered as the
largest and most violent volcanic event in recorded history. The cataclysmic eruption occurring on
11 April 1815 was initiated by a plinian eruption on 5 April and killed more than 92,000 people in
Sumbawa and nearby Lombok. It is well-known as the largest eruption in historical time. This event
has an unprecedented impact on the Earth’s atmosphere as huge quantities of erupted ash and volcanic
aerosols inferred with incoming solar radiation to the earth, causing global climate changes for one to
two years. These changes were particularly well documented in temperate latitudes of the Northern
Hemisphere. This catastrophic eruption was documented by a handful of British resident agents, a
sea captain, and an army officer who were scattered in the Indonesian Archipelago. The aerosol cloud
spread rapidly around the Earth in about three weeks and attained global coverage by about one year
after the eruption. This caused dramatic decreases of the amount of net radiation reaching the Earth’s
surface. Effects on the climate were an observed surface cooling in the Northern Hemisphere of up to
0.4 to 0.7o C, equivalent to a hemispheric-wide reduction in net radiation of 6 watts per square meter
and a cooling of perhaps as large as -0.6oC over large parts of the Earth in 1816 and caused the year
without a summer.
Keywords: Tambora volcano, volcanic ash, volcanic aerosol, climatic effect

SARI
Erupsi Gunung api Tambora di Pulau Sumbawa pada 1815 dianggap sebagai kejadian terbesar dan
terdahsyat dalam catatan sejarah. Erupsi kataklismik yang terjadi pada 11 April 1815 diawali dengan
erupsi plinian pada 5 April dan membunuh lebih dari 92.000 jiwa di sekitar Sumbawa dan Lombok.
Erupsi ini terkenal sebagai letusan terbesar dalam kurun sejarah. Kejadian ini mempunyai dampak
yang tidak diketahui sebelumnya terhadap atmosfir bumi yaitu menghasilkan sejumlah besar abu
dan aerosol vulkanik, yang menutup radiasi sinar matahari terhadap bumi, sehingga menyebabkan
perubahan iklim dunia dalam satu sampai dua tahun. Perubahan ini terdokumentasi baik di belahan
bumi bagian utara. Erupsi katastrofik ini juga tercatat oleh beberapa aparat residen, kapten laut, dan
perwira angkatan darat Inggris yang saat itu berada di sekitar Kepulauan Indonesia. Awan aerosol
menyebar secara cepat ke sekeliling bumi dalam waktu tiga minggu, dan menutupi sekeliling dunia
dalam 1 tahun setelah erupsi. Hal ini menyebabkan penurunan dramatis sejumlah jaringan radiasi yang
mencapai permukaan bumi. Dampak perubahan iklim tersebut teramati dengan adanya penurunan
suhu permukaan di belahan utara mencapai 0,4o sampai 0,7o C, yang ekuivalen dengan reduksi luas
belahan dalam jaringan radiasi sebesar 6 watt per meter persegi, dan pendinginan sebesar -0,6o C
pada area yang luas di permukaan bumi pada tahun 1816, sehingga menimbulkan kehilangan musim
panas pada tahun itu.
Kata kunci: Gunung Tambora, abu vulkanik, aerosol vulkanik, dampak iklim

Naskah diterima: 07 April 2011, revisi terakhir: 29 Juli 2011 65


Majalah Geologi Indonesia, Vol. 26 No. 2 Agustus 2011: 65-71

INTRODUCTION relatively modest height struck the shores


of the Indonesian islands on 10 April. The
The Tambora Volcano situated in the wave rose to a maximum height of 4 m at
northern part of Sumbawa Island occupies Sanggar for a short time around 10 p.m. and
the Sanggar Peninsula (Figure 1). Eruption reached Besuki in East Java (500 km away)
of the Tambora Volcano in 1815 is generally with a height of 1 to 2 m, before midnight.
considered as the largest and most violent Therefore, its average velocity must have
volcanic event in recorded history. The been of 70 m/sec. Travel time for a wave
estimated loss of life in Sumbawa and nearby between Tambora and Besuki was estimated
Lombok are about 92,000 and the volume to be about 2 hours. The tsunami was also
of the erupted tephra has been estimated to observed in Maluku Islands with a wave
be about 150 km3 (Stothers, 1984; Self et height of over 2 m. The physical cause of
al., 1984; Sigurdsson and Carey, 1989). The the tsunami was probably the sudden entry
ash fall was recorded at least 1,300 km from of the pyroclastic flows into the sea that
the source and the sound of the explosions was reported to have taken place in the
was heard to 2,600 km in distance. A region three coastal towns; Tambora, Sanggar, and
extending up to 600 km west of the volcano Bima. Another tsunami reached Sumenep in
was plunged into darkness up to three Madura at 7 p.m. on 11 April with a height
days. Stothers (1984) noted that tsunami of of about 1 m.

0 20 40 60
kilometers

FLORES SEA
o
8 S
MT. TAMBORA
Sutodo Island Kawinda
Madang Island Sangiang Island

MT. SANGIANG
BIMA BAY

Pekot SANGGAR BAY


SU Moyo Island
M Kare
BA
W
A Sanggar
Panjang Island BA
Y BIMA
Liang Island SA
LE
Alas SUMBAWA BESAR Ngall Island H B DOMPU
AY
Nungga

Rakit Island

Taliwang
Jompong
Jereweh

o
9 S
INDIAN OCEAN

o o o
117 E 118 E 119 E

Figure 1. Locality map of Tambora Volcano in Sumbawa Island occupying most of the Sanggar peninsula
northern part of Sumbawa Island.

66
Effects of the 1815 Tambora Eruption to the Atmosphere and Climate (I. S. Sutawidjaja)

EJECTA OF 1815: VOLUMES two layers is sharp at proximal sites but


becomes increasingly gradational at sites
There are six layers could be distinguished more than 50 km from the source. The
surrounding the volcano and the volumes unusual dispersal of this ash both to the east
of the whole layers have been calculated; and west of Tambora may be a reflection
the lowest consisting of phreatomagmatic of plume dispersal in both high- and low-
ash fall as the first product of the 1815 altitude winds with the opposite polarity.
Tambora eruptive sequence is a gray, silty to The volume of the third layer is 0.32 km3.
sandy ash fall layer, which was distributed The fourth layer is a Plinian tephra fall as
to the west of the volcano. It is 1-10 cm the coarsest and most extensive of all the
thick on the western flank of Tambora and early fall deposits from the 1815 Tambora
eastern of Moyo Island and the volume of activity. The thickness of this layer is in
this layer is 0,09 km3. The second layer is a excess of 20 cm over the entire western
plinian tephra fall, a pale-gray-green Plinian flank of Tambora, and the isopach of the
pumice fall deposit overlies the first layer fall deposit is strongly symmetrical to the
and extends over a wide area to the west volcano, elongated to the west. Closer to
of Tambora. The layer is typically 10 to 30 the volcano, however, the thickness remains
cm thick on the slopes of the volcano and relatively constant in the range of 25 to 30
has a volume of 1.18 km3. The third layer cm and the volume of the deposit is about
is a tephra fall containing sandy to silty 3.02 km3. In these areas the pumice fall is
pumice ash fall. The contact between the overlain by a surge deposit (Figure 2), and

Meter

4
Surface

Pyroclastic flow April 10 - 11


1 - 4 meters

Pyroclastic surge April 10

Plinian pumice fall April 10


1
Phreatomagmatic ash fall April 5 - 10

Plinian pumice fall April 5

Phreatomagmatic ash fall Pre-April 5

Basement rock
0

Figure 2. Pyroclastic stratigraphy of the 1815 Tambora eruptive products at Tambora village. Dates to the right of
the stratigraphic column indicate the inferred timing of the different eruptive phases based on historical reports.

67
Majalah Geologi Indonesia, Vol. 26 No. 2 Agustus 2011: 65-71

it is believed that here the pumice fall has independently for the Taupo deposit by
been eroded during passage of the surge crystal-glass fractionation calculations
(Sutawidjaja et al, 2006). (Wilson, 1980). The volume of the Tambora
fall deposits were calculated with a lower
Volumes of the four early tephra deposits
integration thickness limit of one micron
of the 1815 eruptive sequence have been
and an upper thickness limit based on
determined from a combination of isopach
proximal thickness measurements. Because
maps and an extrapolation technique
it was not possible to subdivide the first and
proposed by Sigurdsson (1989). Plots of
isopach area versus isopach thickness were third layers at all localities, especially in the
constructed for each of the fall layers. On distal sections, only the bulk volume of the
plots of this type, tephra fall data can usually complete sequences has been calculated.
be subdivided into two linear segments With the exception of the first layer, about
(Sigurdsson, 1989) and the volume of a 70% of the volume of the fall deposits lies
deposit can be found by integrating the area outside of the mapped area (Figure 3). The
under the lines between two preselected total volume of tephra deposited during
thickness limits. For the Tambora deposits, the first through the fourth events was 4.6
the upper line segment has been adjusted so km3 (DRE).
that the slope is the same as a line used by The large fragments of pumice thus are
Wilson (1980) to calculate the volume of confined to the surrounding areas, while
Taupo ultra-Plinian layer. This line when the finer ash particles were transported
extrapolated to a thickness of 1 micron over a large area of the eastern Indonesia
yielded the same volume as that determined by the wind, which was primarily from the

Figure 3. Ash deposits of the 1815 Tambora eruptive products preserved at Nangamiro village. The thickness
of the outcrop is about 3 m.

68
Effects of the 1815 Tambora Eruption to the Atmosphere and Climate (I. S. Sutawidjaja)

E and NE during the days of the eruption. definitely is high, then Simkin still obtains
Sigurdsson (1989) calculated that the 150 km3.
distribution of pyroclastic flows on the
slopes of Tambora was estimated in total
deposition area on land of 820 km2 and EJECTA OF 1815: ITS ATMOSPHERIC
874 km2 for pyroclastic flows and surges, EFFECTS
respectively, and all of the exposures show
that pyroclastic flow deposits overlain surge Radiative forcing the climate system by
deposits. The flows exceed a total thickness stratospheric aerosols depends on the
of 20 m, but the average is about 7 m, geographic dist aerosol distribution, altitude,
indicating a minimum subaerial volume of size distribution, and optical depth of the
5.7 km3. aerosols, but tropospheric temperatures are
most strongly dependent on the total optical
Junghuhn (in Stothers, 1984) calculated
depth (Lacis et al., 1992). This cloud injected
the amount of material ejected by 1815
about 25 Mt of SO2 into the stratosphere, and
Tambora eruption, at 318 km3 of tephra fall
this SO2 immediately began to convert into
and pyroclastic flow deposits. The ash was
H2SO4 aerosols to the stratospheric aerosol
several meters thick close to the volcano; in
layer. Using a forcing in the model equivalent
Lombok Island at 90 minutes distances from to a global mean of about 0.15 based on
Tambora, 70 cm thick; in Banyuwangi, East conditions appropriate for the Pinatubo
Java, 210 minutes away from the volcano, cloud yielded a model radiative forcing at
20 cm thick. Junghuhn draws a circle with a the tropopause of -4 W/m2 (Hansen et al.,
radius of 210 minutes around Tambora and 1992). This study shows that the temperature
assumes that the average thickness of the ash anomaly after Tambora is about -0.4 to -0.7
within this circle was 60 cm. But because degrees cooler than the average over a large
the wind was mainly from the E, and the part of the Earth (Stothers et al., 1984).
finer material was there for largely carried Certainly, in terms of widespread impact, due
to the W (Lombok, Bali and Banyuwangi), to its equatorial location, the early summer
the assumption that sixty centimeters of ash date of eruption, and the resulting global
fell everywhere is too high for the areas for spread of the aerosol cloud, the peak optical
the areas situated E, N, and S of Tambora. depth attained by the widespread aerosol
Javasche Courant reported that the ash layer cloud, estimated to be >1.0 in northern
was only 0,1 m thick in Bima, 60 km E of latitudes is six month after the eruption. The
the volcano; and only 0.03 m in Makassar, Tambora aerosol cloud that enveloped the
270 km N of Tambora. According to Simkin Earth from the end of April 1815 to late 1816
and Fiske (1983) Junghuhn’s calculation (Figure 4) is the largest that followed by the
therefore give apparently much too high. approximately 10 km3 Krakatau eruption
It is more likely that the ash deposit with in late August 1883 (Rampino and Selt,
an average thickness of 60 cm, only fell in 1982) consisting an estimated global aerosol
a rectangle of approximately 150 minutes midvisible optical depth for Krakatau, which
wide and 300 minutes long, with Tambora was 0.14 in the late 1884 to early 1885.
located close to the eastern end of this This value is for the Krakatau aerosol layer
rectangle. Simkin and Fiske (1983) then after more than 1 year’s dispersal (Tabel
obtain: J = 2/3 x 150 x 300 x (1855 x 1855) 1), and presumably much sedimentation of
km3/109 = 103 km3. If it takes another 50% particles, and peak optical depths may have
for the material falling outside of it, which been considerably larger.

69
Majalah Geologi Indonesia, Vol. 26 No. 2 Agustus 2011: 65-71

Figure 4. Schematic diagram how the aerosol cloud and ash materials spread rapidly around the globe in about
three weeks and attained global coverage 1 year after the eruption caused the year without a summer(Courtesy
Discovery Channel).

Tabel 1. Comparison of Volcanic Aerosol ejected from the Volcanoes

Volcano Location Age Aerosol Reference


(Megaton)
Tambora Indonesia 1815 40-60 Stothers, 1984
Krakatau Indonesia 1883 30-50 Rampino and Self, 1982
El-Chichon Mexico 1982 17 Rampino and Self, 1984
Pinatubo Philippines 1991 15-20 Newhall and Punongbayan, 1996

CONCLUSIONS 25 Mt of SO2 into the stratosphere. The


aerosol cloud and ash materials spread
The 1815 eruption of Tambora produced rapidly around the globe in about three
about 318 km3 of dacitic magma, and this weeks and attained the global coverage
is the largest volume in historical time. one year after the eruption caused the year
Eruption columns rising above the vent without a summer. Effect to the climate is
reached in excess of 33 to 43 km in altitude the cooling in the Northern Hemisphere as
and emplaced a giant umbrella cloud in the large as -0.7oC over large parts of the Earth
middle to upper stratosphere that attained in 1815-1816.
a maximum dimension of over 1,000 km Global impact of Tambora eruption was
in diameter, and this cloud injected about profound to the people in the Northern

70
Effects of the 1815 Tambora Eruption to the Atmosphere and Climate (I. S. Sutawidjaja)

Hemisphere that starved to death because (1963), their stratospheric aerosols and climatic
they lost their summer during the year, and impact. Quaternary Research, 18, p.127-143.
the volcanic aerosols changed the climate. Rampino, M.R. and Self, S., 1984. The atmospheric
For the next large volcanic eruptions, these effects of El Chichon. Scientific American, 250,
aerosols will produce acid rain, endangering p.48-57.
skin and irritation of eyes.
Self, S., Rampino, M., Newton, M., and Wolff, J.,
1984. Volcanological study of the great Tambora
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS eruption of 1815. Geology, 12, p.659-663.

This paper is compiled from the fieldwork data and Sigurdsson, H. and Carey, S., 1989. Plinian and
secondary data. The author thanks colleagues who co-ignimbrite tephra fall from the 1815 eruption
supported to write this paper. of Tambora volcano. Bulletin of Vulcanology, 51,
p.243-270.

REFERENCES Simkin, T. and Fiske, R.S., 1983. Krakatau 1883,


the volcanic eruption and its effects. Smithsonian
Hansen, J., Lacis, A., Ruedy, R., and Sato, M., 1992. Institution Press, Washington D.C.
Potential climate impact of the Mount Pinatubo
eruption. Geophysical Research Letter, 19, p.215- Stothers, R.B., 1984. The great Tambora eruption in
218. 1815 and its aftermath. Science, 224, p.1191-1198.

Lacis, A., Hansen, J., and Sato, M., 1992, Climate Sutawidjaja, I.S., Sigurdsson, H., and Abrams, L.,
forcing by stratospheric aerosols. Geophysical 2006. Characterization of Volcanic Deposits and
Research Letter, 19, p.1607-1610. Geoarchaeological Studies from the 1815 Eruption
of Tambora Volcano. Journal Geologi Indonesia,
Newhall, C.G. and Punongbayan, R.S., 1996. Fire 1(1), p.49-57.
and mud, eruptions and lahars of Mt. Pinatubo,
Philippines. University of Washington Press, Seattle Wilson, L., 1980. Relationship between pressure,
and London, 1126pp. volatile content, and ejecta velocity in three types
of volcanic explosions. Journal of Volcanology
Rampino, M.R. and Self, S., 1982. Historic eruptions Geothermal Research, 8, p.297-313.
of Tambora (1815), Krakatau (1883), and Agung

71
Majalah Geologi Indonesia, Vol. 26 No. 2 Agustus 2011: 65-71

72

Você também pode gostar