*Indonesia**'s explosive geology explained *

*Islands are ringed by a chain of fire-breathing volcanoes *

*By Brett Israel *





 *Indonesia** is a dangerous country to call home. *

Precariously located above the grinding and mashing of several tectonic
plates, and ringed by a chain of fire-breathing
volcanoes<http://www.livescience.com/php/multimedia/album.php?aid=35331>,
the country's islands are located in *one of the most volatile regions in
the world.* The eruption of a volcano and the shaking of a
tsunami-generating earthquake this week is just one reminder of Indonesia's
fiery foundation.

As the world's largest archipelago — spread across 17,500 islands —
Indonesia sits between the world's most active seismic region — the
notorious* Pacific Ring of Fire* — and the world's second most active region
— the Alpide belt. Being sandwiched between such seismicity has meant the
islands experience some of the strongest earthquakes and most powerful
volcanic eruptions known on Earth. [Related: Why Do Some Earthquakes Cause
Tsunamis But Others Don't?
<http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/why-do-some-earthquakes-cause-tsunamis-but-others-dont-1125/>]


*Pacific Ring of Fire **
*The Pacific Ring of
Fire<http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/secret-behind-formation-of-volcanic-ring-of-fire-found-0644/>,
technically called the* Circum-Pacific belt,* is the world's greatest
earthquake belt, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), due to its
series of fault lines stretching 25,000 miles from Chile in the Western
Hemisphere through Japan and Southeast Asia.

Earthquakes typically occur along faults, which are breaks in the rocky
plates of the Earth's crust. These faults accumulate strain over the years
as two plates butt heads. Roughly 90 percent of all the world's
earthquakes<http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/earthquakes-rock-in-synchrony-study-suggests-0292/>,
and 80 percent of the world's largest earthquakes, strike along the Ring of
Fire. About 17 percent of the world's largest earthquakes and 5-6 percent of
all quakes occur along the Alpide belt.

Indonesia feels the worst of both worlds, lying between the Pacific Ring of
Fire along the northeast, and the Alpide belt along the south and west from
Sumatra down to Timor.

*In 2009 alone, Indonesia had 10 earthquakes greater than a magnitude-6.0,
according to the USGS. *

*Butting heads **
*Monday's 7.7-magnitude
<http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/measuring-earthquake-magnitude-richter-scale-1041/>earthquake
that triggered a 10-foot tsunami, killing at least 113 people, occurred when
the Australia and Sunda plates butted heads. Called thrust faulting, one
rocky plate subducted or took a dive below the other, resulting in an
earthquake.

Other large ruptures along the Sunda megathrust include the 9.1-magnitude
2004 quake and Indian Ocean tsunami that killed approximately 230,000 people
in a dozen countries. A look beneath Indonesia would reveal lots of shifting
and colliding plates. Below the country, the Eurasian Plate, Australian
Plate, Indian Plate, Sunda Plate and Pacific Plate mash together.

In fact, the plate movements are also responsible for some of the most
active volcanoes. For instance, the Indian Plate is subducting beneath the
Eurasian continental plate, which has formed the volcanic arc in western
Indonesia, home to 129 active volcanoes
<http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/which-us-volcanoes-are-most-dangerous-right-now--0218/>in
Indonesia that are a part of the Ring of Fire.

The Pacific Ring of Fire is home to 452 volcanoes in total — that's 75
percent of the world's active and dormant volcanoes.

*Mountain of fire **
Both of Indonesia's most active volcanoes — Kelut and Mount Merapi (meaning
"mountain of fire") — sit on Java Island. *

And both have a history of explosive eruptions. Mount Merapi erupted Oct.
26, with preliminary reports of 100 people killed, according to the USGS.
Merapi is located in central Java, roughly 310 miles southeast of the
capital Jakarta.

Mount Merapi last erupted in 2006, killing two, but its violent history
includes more than 1,300 killed in a 1930 eruption and possibly 70 killed in
a 1994 eruption.

Other colossal volcanic eruptions that have occurred in Indonesia include
the eruption of* Krakatau,* which reportedly generated the loudest sound
ever heard in modern history when it exploded in 1883, killing 40,000
people. Krakatau is a volcanic island located between the islands of Java
and Sumatra.

*The Toba supervolcano located on the island of Sumatra, which erupted
70,000 years ago, was a global catastrophe, creating **six years of volcanic
winter* <http://www.livescience.com/history/070710_toba_winter.html>*. *

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