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In 1815, Mount Tambora experienced the largest volcanic eruption in recorded history. The eruption's effects altered Earth’s climate for years and even led to the “year without summer” in 1816.
In early April 1815, Mount Tambora, a long-dormant volcano ... rather sudden and often extreme changes in surface weather after the eruption of Tambora, lasting from one to three years," stated ...
Mount Tambora remains active. Continuous monitoring of the volcano ... Abrams, Haraldur Sigurdsson, Characterization of pyroclastic fall and flow deposits from the 1815 eruption of Tambora volcano, ...
The eruption of Mount Tambora killed thousands ... More than 13,000 feet high, Tambora blew up in 1815 and blasted 12 cubic miles of gases, dust and rock into the atmosphere and onto the island ...
On April 5, 1815, in what was then called the Dutch East Indies and is now called Indonesia, the volcano Mount Tambora erupted. The eruption built up for several days until, on April 10 ...
Mount Tambora changed the world. In 1815, the Indonesian volcano exploded in the most powerful eruption in recorded history, sending an enormous plume of tiny sun-reflecting particles high into ...