Tambora Mountain, on the island of Sumbawa midway between Jakarta and
Darwin, was one of the highest in our region until 1815. It then exploded,
sending an estimated 160 cubic kilometres of pyroclastic material into the
atmosphere.
The explosion would
certainly have been heard by the few inhabitants of northern Australia, since
there were reports from Jakarta and more distant Sumatra. But the pyroclastic
material was carried primarily westward by the prevailing winds, dropping
mostly on the land and waters of Indonesia before carrying an ash cloud several
times around the world.
Those directly killed by the
explosion of gases and lava flows were mainly on the Tambora Peninsula of
Sumbawa itself, where the explosion killed virtually everybody — thought to be
11,000 people. Speakers of the Tambora language were wiped out, eliminating
what is now understood to have been by far the most westerly survival of a
Papuan-type language.
At least 10 times as many
died slowly of hunger and disease in the remainder of Sumbawa Island and in
nearby Lombok and Bali, as agriculture was destroyed by ash deposits and lack
of sunlight. The devastated population was then assailed by infestations of
rats, which consumed much of the little food left.
In good times Bali was a
major exporter of rice, but for two decades after 1815 its major export was
slaves desperate to find food elsewhere. Only after 10–15 years of misery did
the ecological curse turn again to a blessing as the ash was absorbed to
fertilise Bali’s soils. Those who died of hunger in this way were not reported
as victims of the volcano, any more than those who died as the ash cloud
darkened skies and lowered temperatures in Europe and America.
The dearth of population
figures anywhere in Indonesia before 1820 vitiates demographic attempts to
calculate the loss. But using population figures to estimate the later, smaller
eruptions of Krakatau (1883) and Kelut (1919) shows a missing agricultural population
of a little under 100,000 from the former and well over that figure in the
latter.
Why did Tambora remain so
little known, despite ejecting at least four times as much material as
Krakatau, the second biggest eruption of the modern era?
Krakatau was much closer to
the European communication centres of Singapore and Batavia (Jakarta), while
the introduction of the telegraph in mid-century had shrunk the world
dramatically. Newspaper readers in Europe eagerly consumed descriptions and
images of the Krakatau eruption, and some even linked it to strange weather
conditions in Europe.
Tambora’s eruption was
hardly reported in Europe. Only in the last 30 years have climatologists,
geophysicists and historians worked out the relative scale of past eruptions
through physical measurement of craters and ash deposit in polar ice cores. The
dots were joined to point to Tambora’s impact on the climate.
The explosion is now
understood to have lowered global temperatures by about a degree, and produced
in 1816 the ‘year without summer’ in Western Europe and New England, with
frosts and snowfalls in June and July. There were consequent famines in many
parts of Europe, western China and North America, triggering the westward
migration of New England farmers rendered desperate by the failure of their
1816 crops. J.M.W. Turner’s darkly yellow landscapes have been attributed to
the Tambora eruption, and the ‘incessant rainfall’ induced Mary Shelley to stay
indoors on a Swiss holiday and write her classic Frankenstein.
Although our Eurocentric
memory continues to be better-informed about Vesuvius and Etna, the science now
understands that it is the volcanic arc to the north of Australia that poses
the greatest risk to humanity. Homo sapiens came closest to being wiped out, it
is now believed, by the massive explosion in Sumatra that left the crater that
is now Lake Toba, 74,000 years ago.
A fuller appreciation of the
magnitude of Tambora’s effects 200 years ago would be likely to have healthier
effects on our national priorities than the obsession with military
anniversaries. Preparing for future mega-eruptions on the ‘ring of fire’ to
Australia’s north would serve us better than feeding the insecurities that
repeatedly send us off to fight other people’s wars on the false premise of an
‘insurance policy’.
It was another, smaller
Indonesian volcanic eruption, Galunggang in 1982, which first alerted the
airline industry to the danger of volcanic ash to passenger jets, two of which
were forced to make emergency landings after engine failures caused by the ash.
A mega-eruption on the scale of Tambora or Krakatau repeated in our age of mass
air travel would have unimaginable consequences for global communication,
isolating Australia for months if not years. There were two such mega-eruptions
in the 19th century but none of equal size in the 20th.
All of this suggests that
the last century and a half has been unusually fortunate for our region, but
another mega-disaster of this
kind should be expected in the century ahead. We may have failed to
learn the lessons of Gallipoli, but 200 years should be enough to learn the lessons of
Tambora and devote more of our defence budget
to preparing for tectonic catastrophe.
Anthony Reid is an emeritus
professor in the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National
University.
A version of this article
was first published in Asian Currents,
the newsletter of the Asian Studies Association of Australia.
ReplyDeleteIn good times Bali was a major exporter of rice, but for two decades after 1815 its major export was slaves desperate to find food elsewhere. Only after 10–15 years of misery did the ecological curse turn again to a blessing as the ash was absorbed to fertilise Bali’s soils. Those who died of hunger in this way were not reported as victims of the volcano, any more than those who died as the ash cloud darkened skies and lowered temperatures in Europe and America