Showing posts with label Halmahera Arc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halmahera Arc. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 January 2025

Evacuations ordered after increase in activity from Mount Ibu on Halmahera Island, Indonesia.

Authorities in North Maluku Province, Indonesia, have ordered the evacuation of six villages close to Mount Ibu, a 1325 m stratovolcano on the northwest coast of Halmahera Island, following a series of eruptions in the first two weeks of 2025. Mount Ibu began its current eruptive cycle in June 2024, but January has seen a significant rise in activity, with more than a thousand eruptions have been recorded on the volcano this year, with the largest producing ash columns reaching as high as 4 km over the summit of the volcano. However, to date only one village, with a population of 517 people, has been evacuated, with about 2500 people in the remaining five villages reluctant to leave without first harvesting crops.

An eruption on Mount Ibu, Halmahera Island, on Wednesday 15 January 2024. Azzam/AFP.

The Halmahera Island chain is a volcanic arc formed where the Halmahera Plate, a northeaster extension of the Molucca Sea Plate is being subducted beneath Philippine Plate from the east and the Eurasian Plate from the west, with the underlying plate being melted by the heat of the Earth's interior, and lighter minerals bubbling up through the overlying plate to form volcanoes. The Halmahera volcanoes are located where the Philippine Plate is overriding the Molucca Sea Plate; to the west the Sangihe Islands lie where the Molucca Sea Plate is being overridden by the Eurasian Plate.

Diagrammatic representation of the subduction zones beneath Halmahera (middle), plus the Philippines (top) and Sulawesi (bottom), with the Eurasian Plate to the left, the Molucca Sea Plate in the middle, and the Philippine Plate to the right.  Hall & Wilson (2000).

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Sunday, 19 May 2024

Exclusion area around Mount Ibu, Halmahera Island, extended following new eruption.

The Indonesian Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation has extended the exclusion zone around  Mount Ibu, a 1325 m stratovolcano on the northwest coast of Halmahera Island, following a new eruption on 18 May 2024. A two kilometre exclusion zone had already been put in place after the volcano began erupting on 28 April, but this has been increased to seven kilometres following the most recent eruption, which produced an ash column which rose to 4 km above the volcano's summit, resulting in seven villages needing to be evacuated. 

An ash column and lava fountain above Mount Ibu on the Indonesian island of Halmahera on 18 May 2024. Several lightning discharges can be seen within the ash column; ash columns can build up considerable charge variations leading to frequent electrical discharges. Indonesian Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation/Reuters.

The Halmahera Island chain is a volcanic arc formed where the Halmahera Plate, a northeaster extension of the Molucca Sea Plate is being subducted beneath Philippine Plate from the east and the Eurasian Plate from the west, with the underlying plate being melted by the heat of the Earth's interior, and lighter minerals bubbling up through the overlying plate to form volcanoes. The Halmahera volcanoes are located where the Philippine Plate is overriding the Molucca Sea Plate; to the west the Sangihe Islands lie where the Molucca Sea Plate is being overridden by the Eurasian Plate.

Diagrammatic representation of the subduction zones beneath Halmahera (middle), plus the Philippines (top) and Sulawesi (bottom), with the Eurasian Plate to the left, the Molucca Sea Plate in the middle, and the Philippine Plate to the right.  Hall & Wilson (2000).

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Monday, 29 April 2024

Eruption on Mount Ibu, Halmahera Island, Indonesia.

The Regional Disaster Mitigation Agency for West Halmahera District has reported an eruption on Mount Ibu, a 1325 m stratovolcano on the northwest coast of Halmahera Island, Indonesia, on Sunday 28 April  2024 (a stratovolcano is a cone-shaped volcano made up of layers of ash and lava, although Mount Ibu has a truncated shape, having lost its upper part in an explosion at some point in the past). The eruption started at 0.37 am local time, and lasted approximately three minutes and 26 seconds, producing a column of dark ash which rose 3.5 km above the summit of the volcano and drifted to the west. The Regional Disaster Mitigation Agency has asked people not to go within 2 km of the volcano for the time being, and has issued dust masks to residents of 16 villages in the area. Sam Ratulangi International Airport, about 100 km from the volcano in the city of Manado, is closed to flights temporarily.

An ash column over Mount Ibu at 0.44 am local time on Sunday 28 April 2024. Abdul Fatah/Antara News Agency.

The Halmahera Island chain is a volcanic arc formed where the Halmahera Plate, a northeaster extension of the Molucca Sea Plate is being subducted beneath Philippine Plate from the east and the Eurasian Plate from the west, with the underlying plate being melted by the heat of the Earth's interior, and lighter minerals bubbling up through the overlying plate to form volcanoes. The Halmahera volcanoes are located where the Philippine Plate is overriding the Molucca Sea Plate; to the west the Sangihe Islands lie where the Molucca Sea Plate is being overridden by the Eurasian Plate.

Diagrammatic representation of the subduction zones beneath Halmahera (middle), plus the Philippines (top) and Sulawesi (bottom), with the Eurasian Plate to the left, the Molucca Sea Plate in the middle, and the Philippine Plate to the right.  Hall & Wilson (2000).

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Thursday, 14 January 2021

Magnitude 6.2 Earthquake beneath West Sulawesi, Indonesia.

The United States Geological Survey recorded a Magnitude 6.2 Earthquake at a depth of 18.4 km, approximately 36 km to the south of the city of Mamuju in West Sulawesi Province, Indonesia, slightly before 2.30 am local time on Friday 15 January 2021 (slightly before 6.30 pm on Thursday 14 January, GMT). There are no reports of any damage or injuries relating to this event at this time, but people have reported feeling it locally.

 
The approximate location of the 15 January 2021 West Sulawesi Province Earthquake. USGS.

The tectonic situation beneath Sulawesi is complex, as it is caught in the collisional zone between the Eurasian, Pacific and Australian Plates. The north of the island is located on a breakaway section of the Eurasian Plate, called the Sangihe Plate. To the east lies the remnant Molucca Sea Plate, which is being subducted beneath both the Sangihe Plate and the more easterly Halmahera Plate, leading to Earthquakes and volcanism on Sulawesi and the islands of the Sangihe Arc in the west and the islands of the Halmahera Arc in the east.

 
The subduction zones beneath Sulawesi and the surrounding islands. Hall & Spakman (2015).

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