Dari dulu saya tidak pernah komentari Salamology dari Rekan Maryanto itu karena 
teori- teorinya di luar jangkauan otak dan pengetahuan saya, apa ini sejenis 
cabang ilmu metafisika? Saya hanya ikuti di milis secara pasif.

Salam,

YSY

 

From: argo wuryanto [mailto:masargo...@yahoo.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2012 2:10 PM
To: iagi-net@iagi.or.id
Subject: Bls: [iagi-net-l] Erupsi besar gunungapi, abad ke 13 di Indonesia ?

 

Wah penelitinya sepertinya ada relasi dengan Pak Maryanto, secara angkanya kok 
bisa pas yah: 7000 th yang lalu :)

 

Penemuan ini semakin mengukuhkan Theory Salamology yah? 

    http://salamology.wordpress.com/salamology/

 

 

salam,

Argo-3711

 

Dari: Yustinus Suyatno Yuwono <yuw...@gc.itb.ac.id>
Kepada: iagi-net@iagi.or.id 
Dikirim: Selasa, 3 Juli 2012 13:03
Judul: RE: [iagi-net-l] Erupsi besar gunungapi, abad ke 13 di Indonesia ?





Salah besar…, G Toba meledak besar 70.000 th yl

YSY

 

From: Franciscus B Sinartio [mailto:fbsinar...@yahoo.com] 
Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2012 7:43 PM
To: iagi-net@iagi.or.id
Subject: Re: [iagi-net-l] Erupsi besar gunungapi, abad ke 13 di Indonesia ?

 

wah hebat ya dating system nya sampai tahu thn nya dengan ketepatan 2 tahun  
(1257 atau 1258).

lah kalau ngak salah katanya saat itu Gunung Toba yang meledak?

 

 

fbs

 

 

From: Rovicky Dwi Putrohari <rovi...@gmail.com>
To: IAGI <iagi-net@iagi.or.id>; "geologi...@googlegroups.com" 
<geologi...@googlegroups.com> 
Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2012 7:31 PM
Subject: [iagi-net-l] Erupsi besar gunungapi, abad ke 13 di Indonesia ?

 

Gunung mana ya ?

 

Rdp

 

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/341497/title/13th_century_volcano_mystery_may_be_solved

 

13th Century Volcano Mystery May Be Solved - Science News

SELFOSS, Iceland — One of the biggest mysteries in volcanology may finally have 
a solution. An eruption long thought to have gone off in the year 1258, 
spreading cooling sulfur particles around the globe, happened the year before 
in Indonesia, scientists report.

Until now, researchers have known a big volcano went off somewhere in the world 
around that time, but they didn’t know exactly where or when.

The new report still remains something of a mystery. Franck Lavigne, a 
geoscientist at Panthéon-Sorbonne University's Laboratory of Physical Geography 
in Meudon, France, showed data and close-up photographs of the remains of the 
perpetrator volcano on June 14 at an American Geophysical Union conference on 
volcanism and the atmosphere. But he declined to name the specific volcano, 
saying he had agreed with his international colleagues not to identify it until 
the work is published in a peer-reviewed journal.

“We have new and solid evidence for the biggest volcanic eruption in 7,000 
years,” Lavigne said.

Consensus in the meeting hallways was that he showed pictures of Indonesia. 
Lavigne would say only that Indonesia has more than 130 active volcanoes.

Scientists know a big eruption must have happened in the mid-13th century 
because ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica dating to that time contain 
huge amounts of sulfur. Tree rings, historical records and other evidence also 
show that the planet cooled soon thereafter. Big volcanic eruptions can spew 
sulfur particles into the upper atmosphere, where they spread around the globe 
and reflect sunlight, temporarily chilling the planet.

Leading candidates for the 1258 eruption have included Mexico’s El Chichón, 
which also erupted in 1982, and Quilotoa in the Ecuadorean Andes. But the 
chemical composition of rocks from those volcanoes, among other factors, don’t 
really match the 1258 sulfur from ice cores.

At the meeting, Lavigne showed geochemical analyses of rocks from his mystery 
volcano. They matched the chemistry of the polar sulfur almost perfectly. The 
rocks come from a caldera, the collapsed remains left behind after a large 
volcanic eruption drains an underground magma chamber.

Newly unearthed historical records and other evidence show that climate changes 
were already happening in the region by the winter of 1257-1258, Lavigne said. 
“We think the eruption may have been in the late spring or summer of 1257,” he 
said. That’s nearly a year earlier than previously thought.

Computer simulations suggest the eruption sent pumice flying into the air more 
than 40 kilometers high, showering debris for tens of kilometers around. The 
eruption would have ranked a 7 on the volcanic explosivity scale that measures 
an eruption’s magnitude. That scale tops out at 8.

Still, volcanologists have spent decades looking for the source of the 
1257/1258 eruption. It’s not yet clear whether Lavigne will be able to marshal 
enough evidence to convince everyone else.

 



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