Mount Yasur

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mount Yasur

Mount Yasur, April 2006
Elevation 361 metres (1,184 ft)
Location Tanna, Vanuatu
Coordinates 19°31′42″S, 169°26′54″E
Type Stratovolcano
Last eruption 2008 (ongoing)
The crater of Mount Yasur
The crater of Mount Yasur

Mount Yasur is an active volcano on Tanna Island, Vanuatu (lat/long 19.52 S, 169.43 E) with a height of 361 m (1,184 ft) above sea level, located on the coast near Sulphur Bay. It lies to the southeast of the taller Mount Tukosmera, which was active in the Pleistocene. It has a largely unvegetated pyroclastic cone with a nearly-circular summit crater 400 m in diameter. It is a stratovolcano, caused by the eastward-moving Indo-Australian Plate being subducted under the westward-moving Pacific Plate. It has been nearly continuously erupting for centuries, although usually it can be approached safely. Its eruptions, which often occur several times an hour, are classified as Strombolian or Vulcanian.

The glow of the volcano was apparently what attracted Captain James Cook on the first European journey to the island in 1774. Today the mountain is a sacred area for the John Frum cargo cult. The cult reveres John Frum, a deified American World War II serviceman, and believe he resides in Mount Yasur with his countrymen. The village of Sulphur Bay, the center of the movement, claims the volcano as part of their territory.

Mount Yasur by day
Mount Yasur by day

Because of the importance of the volcano to the tourism industry in Tanna, the local government has created levels to restrict people's access:

Level 0 - Low activity, access to the crater allowed; Level 1 - Normal activity, access to the crater allowed; Level 2 - Moderate to high activity, lava bombs may land beyond the crater rim, access to the crater is closed; Level 3 - Severe activity with loud explosions, lava bombs ejected up to hundreds of metres outside the crater and large plumes of smoke and ash, access to the summit zone is closed; Level 4 - Major eruption affecting large areas around the volcano and possibly other parts of Tanna and even neighbouring islands, all access closed

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: