No, Mount Krakatoa did not erupt in 413 AD. The most famous eruption of Krakatoa occurred in 1883, which had catastrophic effects and is well-documented. There are no historical records or geological evidence indicating a significant eruption at Krakatoa in 413 AD.
208 ad
Yes it was, in fact, in 79 AD Pompeii was destroyed by Mount Vesuvius.
It was destroyed by Mount Vesuvius erupting Pompeii was destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.
After being badly damaged by an earthquake in 63 AD, Pompeii was completely buried in 79 AD when Mount Vesuvius erupted.
i think it is a 100 mile radius
79 AD.
August 24, 79 AD
ad 79
It erupted in about 79 AD.
Mount Vesuvius erupted on August 24, AD 79, which was a Tuesday.
63 times. It has actually erupted 16 times since 781 AD, which was when Mount Fuji was created.
Vesuvius erupted at approx. 2:41 am on August 24, 79 AD
It wasn't Mount Pompeii, it was Mount Vesuvius. It first erupted 18,300 years ago, but the one we most know of was when it destroyed Pompeii in AD 79.
According to records compiled from different sources there was not a 535 AD eruption of Krakatau, however there was a major eruption around 416 AD that completely destroyed the volcano and created a large undersea caldera. refer to Smithsonian Institute of Global Volcanism for further details
Pompeii does not erupt. Pompeii was a city that was buried by ash and pumice in 79 AD, during an eruption of the volcano Mount Vesuvius.
It happen on the 24th August 79 AD
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