It did a lot of damage.
Mount tambora
No, the Mount Tambora eruption occurred in 1815, not 1968. The eruption caused significant destruction and resulted in the year without a summer due to the ash blocking sunlight.
Tambora is a composite volcano (stratovolcano). A stratovolcano/composite volcano is explosive, usually creating large ash clouds, pyroclastic flows and can cause mass destruction for miles and sometimes effect the entire earth for years. *Skylla*
During the 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia, it is estimated that around 71,000 people died directly due to the volcanic eruption. The majority of these deaths were caused by pyroclastic flows, tsunamis, and the resulting starvation and disease in the aftermath.
The eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815 led to a volcanic winter, causing a decrease in global temperatures and disrupting weather patterns. This in turn led to widespread crop failures and food shortages, resulting in famine in many regions around the world, including Europe and North America.
It does hehehe you know studs
The eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815 caused widespread destruction, including the loss of over 70,000 lives due to the direct impact of the eruption and related tsunamis. The eruption also had global climatic consequences, leading to the "Year Without a Summer" in 1816, which resulted in crop failures and food shortages in many parts of the world.
It definitely is a possible cause of it jerking, if it's not an engine mount, service the transmission
everything was destroyed
A volcano is a mount (or mountain) that has magma in it. A volcano also is like an earthquake releasing pressure from the inner core of the earth. If there is a lot of pressure to be released this will cause the eruption to be bigger and more destructive, like the volcano Mount Tambora that erupted in 1815.
around 36 miles from it
Mount Hood is an active stratovolcano located in Oregon, USA. The potential damage it could cause largely depends on the type and magnitude of an eruption, including ash fall, lahars, pyroclastic flows, and lava flows. The surrounding areas could experience significant economic and infrastructural damage in the event of a major eruption.