The 1883 Krakatoa explosion was heard over 2000 miles away. It was heard from Perth, Australia (3,500 km away) and the island of Rodrigues off Mauritius (4,800 km away) so it was pretty louddd
You could hear the Krakatoan eruption from Krakatau all the way to Madagascar and the Phillippines.
3000 miles + (5000Km)
18 miles
Krakatoa or Krakatau in Indonesia was the loudest volcanic explosion that ever recorded, was heard 3,500 km ( 2,170 miles ) and it was in 1883
Mount Krakatoa in Indonesia in 1883 was the loudest ever heard and recorded volcanic eruption, the sound of its eruption was heard up to the northernmost tip of Japan
Krakatoa was loud enough to be heard almost anywhere on the planet. When it blew people within range of it where killed by the force. According to the website at the link provided below the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa was historically measured at 180 decibels. The explosion was heard 1,930 miles away in Perth, Australia and the island of Rodrigues near Mauritius 3,000 miles away.
There's no limit to the distance a sound travels, as long as it doesn't hit something that absorbs it, or run out of a material medium to travel through. But the intensity of the sound becomes less at increasing distances, so the real question is: How soft a sound can you hear ? It's been suggested that the human voice travels only as far as the listener's ear. But of this were true, then when one person heard a voice, nobody who was farther away could hear the same voice. A theater that presents live plays would need no seating behind the first row!
a loud sound
Krakatoa or Krakatau in Indonesia was the loudest volcanic explosion that ever recorded, was heard 3,500 km ( 2,170 miles ) and it was in 1883
My best answer is that when Mount Krakatoa erupted in 1883, it produced the loudest sound in recorded history.
Mount Krakatoa in Indonesia in 1883 was the loudest ever heard and recorded volcanic eruption, the sound of its eruption was heard up to the northernmost tip of Japan
Krakatoa was loud enough to be heard almost anywhere on the planet. When it blew people within range of it where killed by the force. According to the website at the link provided below the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa was historically measured at 180 decibels. The explosion was heard 1,930 miles away in Perth, Australia and the island of Rodrigues near Mauritius 3,000 miles away.
The explosion of the Island of Krakatoa was heard in London, half-way round the world.
The sound was so loud, it could be heard 3,000+ miles away. Diego Garcia, a U S Naval Base it located there. So, I would guess, the decibal rate would be @2,500-4,000bls.
The loudest noise or sound is The Bloop because in 1997, U.S. NOAA heard a sound that is never been heard of that is also the loudest sound ever. The sound can cause from more than 5,000 km away from it's source. If it is an animal, it is louder and bigger than the loudest animal and the biggest animal in Earth.
Augusts 23th, 1883.1883The 1883 eruption ejected approximately 21 cubic kilometres (5.0 cu mi) of rock, ash and Pumice . and generated the loudest sound historically reported: the cataclysmic explosion was distinctly heard as far away as Perth in Australia approx. 1,930 miles (3,110 km), and the island of Rodriges approx. 3,000 miles (5,000 km) distant. Near Krakatoa, according to official records, 165 villages and towns were destroyed and 132 seriously damaged, at least 36,417 (official toll) people died, and many thousands were injured by the eruption, mostly from the tsunamis that followed the explosion. The eruption destroyed two-thirds of the island of Krakatoa. August 26, 1883.That was the last massive eruption of Krakatau/Krakatoa. It still erupts quite often. The last confirmed eruption occurred in 2008.
194 dB (decibels) is the loudest sound on Earth ever. Some people say that the eruption of Krakatoa in 1883 was the loudest sound ever, being heard at 5,000 kilometers away! That eruption was around 180 dB!
There's no limit to the distance a sound travels, as long as it doesn't hit something that absorbs it, or run out of a material medium to travel through. But the intensity of the sound becomes less at increasing distances, so the real question is: How soft a sound can you hear ? It's been suggested that the human voice travels only as far as the listener's ear. But of this were true, then when one person heard a voice, nobody who was farther away could hear the same voice. A theater that presents live plays would need no seating behind the first row!
krakatoa
a loud sound