Mount Sinabung Erupts Twice, Hot Clouds Spread Over 3,000 M
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Antara
Editor
Petir Garda Bhwana
Kamis, 11 Maret 2021 19:24 WIB
Mount Sinabung spewed volcanic material during an eruption in Kuta Rakyat Village, Naman Teran, Karo, North Sumatra, Tuesday, March 2, 2021. Mount Sinabung erupted with a column height of 5,000 meters above the peak. ANTARA PHOTOS / Sastrawan Ginting
TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - Mount Sinabung in Karo district, North Sumatra province erupted twice on Thursday, ejecting hot clouds as far as three kilometers away.
The first eruption occurred at 07:37 a.m. Western Indonesian Time (WIB), with the ash column reaching a height of 1,000 meters in the westerly and southwesterly directions, Head of the Mount Sinabung Observation Post, Armen Putra, stated on Thursday.
"It was recorded to have an amplitude of 40 mm and a duration of 5 minutes and 38 seconds," he added.
The volcano again emitted hot clouds twice, with the first hot clouds recorded at 09:22 a.m. WIB, with a sliding distance of three thousand meters, and the second hot clouds detected at 9.29 a.m. WIB, with a sliding distance of two thousand meters from the peak.
The emergency status of the 2,460-meter-high volcano has been declared as Level III (alert).
Putra urged residents and farmers to refrain from carrying out activities in villages that have been relocated and at locations within a three-km radius of the mountain’s peak, a five-km radius in the south-east sector, and a four-km radius in the east-north sector.
Mount Sinabung eruptions claimed two lives in 2010 and 15 lives in 2015. The last known eruption, prior to recent times, occurred in the year 1600.