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When The Lid Blew Off
In fact, there was not much left of Krakatoa itself. Red-hot debris covered an area the size of Texas, to a depth of sometimes 100 feet on land, and raising new islands where the rain of rock built up the bed of the ocean. For almost a year afterward the dust of the explosion, blown upward for 30 miles, filled the high atmosphere over the whole globe. Even though there were no large towns within 100 miles of the volcano, 36,000 persons lost their lives. The biggest blast in history was not caused by atomic fission; no staff of scientists was needed to set it off. It was caused by nothing more mysterious than the old-fashioned force that rattles the lid on a teakettle. But the fire under the kettle was a mile-long pocket of seething lava and it changed a cubic mile of ocean into superheated steam. The lid blew off and the kettle exploded as well. Krakatoa was an island of about 18 square miles in the Sunda Strait, in the Dutch East Indies, between Java and Sumatra. Early in the spring of 1883, there were warning signs. Smoke and steam poured from recent fissures in the rock. A river of lava cut a wide swath through the tangled jungle. But the Dutch in Batavia and Palembang and other places on Java and Sumatra were not alarmed. There had always been some volcanic activity in the Sunda Strait. As to the natives' tales of the big explosion that in olden times had split the earth and destroyed the world, why should anybody take them seriously? It was ascertained later that those tales were based on reality. Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com Other articles: temporary job agencies Jobs Princess Cruise Line fbi agent salary |
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