December 23, 2018

"Krakatoa volcano erupts in Indonesia before 'causing tsunami'. Scientists believe the full moon strengthened the rush of water sent crashing into land after the eruption."

Caption to one of the many photographs at "More than 220 dead as tsunami strikes Indonesia: Giant wave wipes out pop concert killing two band members as hundreds are injured and villages destroyed after Krakatoa volcano erupts" (Daily Mail).

35 comments:

rhhardin said...

High tide moves you closer to the ocean but otherwise doesn't affect tsunamis, I don't think. Lots of momentum reaching shallow water is what gives the height. All that momentum has to be carried by less and less water and that makes the wave big. Same thing that makes waves grow and break in general.

John henry said...

I blame Trump because he pulled out of the Paris accords

John Henry

ga6 said...

Water? I thought it would be CO2.

Hagar said...

The moon's mass does not increase from the amount of light reflected from it visible from the earth.

Dust Bunny Queen said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
rhhardin said...

The idea is a full moon has to be opposite the sun so water sucked up and the earth sucked away from it. That overlooks that the tide is actually a fast-travelling wave rather than suckage, but the suckage powers the wave.

traditionalguy said...

Seeing that band playing on stage be swept away by a wall of water brings to mind the days of Noah when they were all celebrating and giving in marriage until the last day.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Blogger Dust Bunny Queen said...

@ rhhardin

I believe what they are saying is that because the tide was high, meaning the water level was heaped higher due to the pull of the full moon, that there was more water to surge into the void left by the crater/eruption, which then caused a larger back surge which became a larger tsunami than would otherwise have occurred.

I have no idea if that is actually a valid hypothesis about the water. The phases of the moon have nothing to do with tides. It is the nearness of the moon to earth.

But. I think that is what they are trying to say.

Since I am talking about hypotheses, valid or not, GLOBAL WARMING! Let's suppose or hope as the Warmists probably wish, that Krakatoa explodes in an earth shattering boom as it did before and tons of ashes are expelled to blot out the sun. The resulting cooling of the earth and deaths of millions of people would just warm the cockles of their shrivel little hearts.

Maybe they will get their wish. A new ice age and the shriveling of human population all over the world.

Of course, they always assume that THEY will be spared.

Fernandinande said...

drummer is missing

Some things are the same the world over. And I'm not referring to Keith Moon.

Fernandinande said...

The phases of the moon have nothing to do with tides. It is the nearness of the moon to earth.

That what I thought, so I looked it up and ... we're wrong. The phase indicates alignment with the sun.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Ah....thank you Fernandistien.

I was mistaken....wrr-wrrrh-wrrrroooong. :-)

Fritz said...

rhhardin said...
High tide moves you closer to the ocean but otherwise doesn't affect tsunamis, I don't think. Lots of momentum reaching shallow water is what gives the height. All that momentum has to be carried by less and less water and that makes the wave big. Same thing that makes waves grow and break in general.


The tsunami and the tide are essentially independent and additive. It looks like tides in the region run 3-5 ft. That means the high water of the tsunami reaches that much higher at high tide. Not insignificant, especially if the land is flat and relatively low.

Fernandinande said...

I was wrong once before - I thought I had made a mistake, but I hadn't.

Hagar said...

Annd then there are Mounts Toba and Tambora ...

gilbar said...

This it Total LUNACY !!

Big Mike said...

Fritz is right on the physics, but wrong on the narrative. John Henry is right on the narrative: it’s gotta be Trump’s fault somehow!

rhhardin said...

The tide changes how far above sea level you are. The tsunami dynamics happen the same however, just delayed by the deeper water.

Lucid-Ideas said...

Ban assault volcanoes. Nobody needs a Krakatoa. There only purpose is to kill.

gilbar said...

Hagar said...
The moon's mass does not increase from the amount of light reflected from it visible from the earth.


Right, but the moon's mass does rotate around the world (29days?) when it's in line with the sun (new moon and full moon), tides are highest(spring tide); when it's completely to the side (1st/4, 3rd/4moon), tides are leastest (neap tide)

Dave Begley said...

Krakota, East of Java.

rhhardin said...

The tsunami and the tide are essentially independent and additive.

Well, not additive. The shifting shorewards of the tsunami wave growth history isn't an additive thing. I think there's probably a place offshore where the peak water level is lower at higher tide, owing to the tsunami not having grown yet in the deeper water.

Curious George said...

The Kia Holiday Sale Ad was a nice touch to tsunami wiping out the band video. From Aaaaah aaaaah aaaaaah to Fa La La La La.

Paul said...

On a beach known for tidel waves?? (yea I know they are tsunamis.) No lookouts? Just dance and booze away? Indonesia is known for these things (remember that BIG one years ago... quarter of a million dead.) And what do they worry about.. Oh... the band members. The people watching that drowned are no big deal.

Yancey Ward said...

The oceans bulge on the opposite side with respect to the Moon, too, because the Earth itself is revolving around the Moon/Earth center of mass- this creates centrifugal force on the oceans opposite the Moon. That center of mass is roughly 3000 miles from the Earth's geometric center. At the full and new Moons, the Sun amplifies these opposite side tidal surges because the three bodies are aligned with each other.

Yancey Ward said...

Here is a representation of how the Earth/Moon system operates around their center of mass.

rhhardin said...

The earth is indifferent to the center of mass. It only feels gravity. Likewise the oceans. The inverse square force attracts nearer more than farther, so the near ocean, then the earth below it, then the far ocean, feel successively weaker forces from the moon.

The center of mass is a conservation thing which ignores differences of effects on the parts. An N-body system rotates about its center of mass, but the parts are all over the place.

chickelit said...

Blogger Dave Begley said...Krakota, East of Java.

My brother and I played a mean game growing up: Whenever either of us would stub a toe, the other would respond: "Crack a toe-a, east of Java."

It always bothered me that Krakatoa is actually west of Central Java.

#nostalgia

chickelit said...

CNN is claiming there is an effective news blackout from the USGS.gov on details because of the government shutdown.

Because Trump!

rcocean said...

"Krakatoa east of Java" was a movie about an Earthquake in the late 19th Century.

rcocean said...

I posted before reading the comments. Its seems others had the same thought.

I saw the movie as a kid on TV, I wish I could have seen in a theater.

chickelit said...

The TV show "Time Tunnel" had that film beat by 2 years: Crack Of Doom (1966). That's where I first learned of all those cubic miles of rock thrown into the air.

Original Mike said...

I loved Time Tunnel back in the day.

I also remember the ridicule of the title "Krakota, East of Java".

David Begley said...

From IMDb, “The producers learned of the geographic error (Krakatoa was west of Java in the Sundra Strait) only after all of the advertising and publicity materials had been prepared. It was deemed too costly to re-do these materials, and possibly delay the release, for the sake of simple geographic accuracy.”

Unknown said...

Also referenced by The B52s.

My body's burnin' like a lava from a Maura Loa
My heart's crackin' like a Krakatoa
Ooh Krakatoa, east of Java, molten bodies, fiery lava
Fire, fire, burnin' bright
Turn on your love lava
Turn on your lava light
Fire, oh volcano, over you
Don't let your lava love turn to stone
Keep it burnin'
Keep it burnin' here at home

familyfuninthekitchen said...

Well, for those curious, Krakatoa is actually WEST of Java. Go figure.