It had island features.
The nearby islands of Java and Sumatra are heavily forested with occasional towns. The small islands that remain of the original Krakatoa are also forested. Some trees grow around the new volcanic island of Anak Krakatau has some trees around the edges but is mostly covered in ash and volcanic rock.
That depends on which eruption you're talking about.
Answer: Italy was unified by 1883 and was basically the same as today in terms of boundaries.
the only thing i see is that the in wthe city they only felt the ground shacking that doesn't dosent seem right to man adt can it likr give u more info about a warning something that would get the peopls interested into krkatoa volcano
if your talking about after an eruption, it can look the same or change significantly like Mt St Helens, the whole north face was blasted away and Krakatoa completely destroyed itself some volcanoes collapse in, and the magma chamber is emptied and compressed... forming a caldera, which can be extremely explosive however, most volcanoes remain looking the same
if your talking about after an eruption, it can look the same or change significantly like Mt St Helens, the whole north face was blasted away and Krakatoa completely destroyed itself some volcanoes collapse in, and the magma chamber is emptied and compressed... forming a caldera, which can be extremely explosive however, most volcanoes remain looking the same
Professor William Waterman Sherman is a made up character in the book The Twenty-One Ballooons by William Pene du Bois. He is a professor for the Western Explorers Club in San Fransisco. He travels in a balloon from San Fransisco to Krakatoa in 1883. This book is fictional, but I think that the island Krakatoa is real. look it up for proof.
search in google!
For this year the mintmarks can only be "S" "O" and "CC" or no mintmarks. No Morgan dollar will have a "P" mintmark like modern coins.
The 1883 eruption of Krakatau was one of the most violent volcanic events in recorded history. It produced massive ash clouds that reached the stratosphere, generating spectacular lightning displays. The eruption culminated in a series of tsunamis that devastated coastlines across the region.
Yellowstone's last eruption was approximately 620,000 years ago, and therefore the precursory events are not well understood. As to what causes any volcanic eruption the answer can be simple or complex depending on which way you look at it. If you look at it from the simple way it is as follows: pressure within the magma chamber exceeds the pressure of the earth holding it in causing an eruption. As per the complex way of what events actually triggered an eruption of this size is poorly understood. It is however more than likely that it was not one single trigger for the eruption but a combination of different things as the magma chamber approached critical that allowed it to break through causing the super eruption.
Yes, of course Krakatoa has a pyroclastic flow. Every volcano has an pyroclastic flow, which can travel up to at huge speeds. Krakatoa's pyroclastic flow raced an amazing 200 mph over 20 miles of open sea. Yes Krakatoa has pyroclastic flows but not all volcanoes produce pyroclastic flows, only Mt. St. Helens type volcanoes usually composed of andesite. Kilauea for example does not produce pyroclastic flows because it is composed of basalt, the lava flows out easily.