It has pohoehoe It has pohoehoe
Krakatoa is made primarily of basaltic rock, a type of volcanic rock that is formed from rapidly cooling lava. The volcano is also composed of ash, pumice, and other volcanic materials that have accumulated over time through eruptions.
Mount Krakatoa varies in color depending on the volcanic activity and the specific minerals present in the rock. It may appear gray, black, or reddish-brown due to the volcanic rock and ash covering its surface.
Krakatoa is in the Indian sea
The Krakatoa eruption in 1883 was a Plinian eruption, which is a highly explosive volcanic event characterized by the eruption of vast amounts of ash and volcanic material into the atmosphere. The eruption of Krakatoa was one of the most powerful volcanic explosions in recorded history.
Krakatoa is classified as a volcanic island and part of the Sunda Strait in Indonesia. It is famous for its explosive volcanic eruptions, including the catastrophic 1883 eruption that caused major devastation in the region.
Krakatoa is made primarily of basaltic rock, a type of volcanic rock that is formed from rapidly cooling lava. The volcano is also composed of ash, pumice, and other volcanic materials that have accumulated over time through eruptions.
well find it out
Mount Krakatoa varies in color depending on the volcanic activity and the specific minerals present in the rock. It may appear gray, black, or reddish-brown due to the volcanic rock and ash covering its surface.
The Eurasian and the Indian Plates collided to make Krakatoa (also known as Krakatau) erupt
That is true. But close rock bands can do the same.
It's a caldera... check wikipedia///
Do you mean :'' When did Krakatoa erupted? Krakatoa erupted in 1883
Do you mean :'' When did Krakatoa erupted? Krakatoa erupted in 1883
Acid (highly siliceous) - much of it andesite if I recall my reading of it correctly. Krakatoa (or '~tau') is a still-active island-arc volcano above a complex, very active subduction zone.
Krakatoa is an island in Indonesia.
Krakatoa is in the Indian sea
mount Krakatoa was discovered in 1784