No, Mt. Stromboli is a very active Volcano.
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*
Given that it tends to erupt in a very explosive manner, mount Tambora has a high silica content.
The 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora was highly explosive. The largest in recorded history.
Yes Tambora can be an explosive volcano. The large 1815 eruption blew nearly 4,000 feet off the top of the mountain and was Earth's biggest volcanic explosion of the past 10,000 years. But it can also have smaller non-explosive eruptions like the one in 1967.
It became a volcano when it firs formed about 57,000 years ago.
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*
Given that it tends to erupt in a very explosive manner, mount Tambora has a high silica content.
The 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora was highly explosive. The largest in recorded history.
no
Yes Tambora can be an explosive volcano. The large 1815 eruption blew nearly 4,000 feet off the top of the mountain and was Earth's biggest volcanic explosion of the past 10,000 years. But it can also have smaller non-explosive eruptions like the one in 1967.
Mount Tambora (or Tamboro) is an active stratovolcano, also known as a composite volcano, on the island of Sumbawa, Indonesia.
yes it is still active
Mount Tambora
If you mean Tambora, it is an active stratovolcano or a composite volcano.
It became a volcano when it firs formed about 57,000 years ago.
Mount tambora
Mt. Tambora is a stratovolcano, also known as a composite volcano. Stratovolcanoes are characterized by steep, symmetrical slopes and periodic explosive eruptions. Mt. Tambora famously erupted in 1815, leading to a significant global cooling event known as the "Year Without a Summer."