Skip to main content

Mountain Telagabodas

Talagabodas

Stratovolcano · Indonesia · 2201m

A monitoring team from the Volcanological Survey of Indonesia visits Talagabodas, located immediately N of Galunggung volcano. The crater contains this large sulfur-saturated lake. Fumaroles, mud pots, and a warm spring are found around the 400-500 m wide lake, which also has an elevated temperature. Changes in lake color occurred in 1913 and 1921, and expanded solfatara activity was reported in 1927.
A monitoring team from the Volcanological Survey of Indonesia visits Talagabodas, located immediately N of Galunggung volcano. The crater contains this large sulfur-saturated lake. Fumaroles, mud pots, and a warm spring are found around the 400-500 m wide lake, which also has an elevated temperature. Changes in lake color occurred in 1913 and 1921, and expanded solfatara activity was reported in 1927. · Photo: Photo by Igan Sutawidjaja (Volcanological Survey of Indonesia). · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Stratovolcano
Country
Indonesia
Region
Sunda-Banda Volcanic Regions / Sunda Volcanic Arc
Elevation
2201m
Coordinates
-7.208, 108.070
Last eruption
Unknown
Tectonic setting
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Landform
Composite
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

The Gunung Talagabodas stratovolcano lies immediately north of the more well-known Galunggung volcano. Talagabodas, also spelled Telaga Bodas, is one of the older Quaternary volcanoes in an arcuate N-S trending volcano group east of the city of Garut and is built up of andesitic lavas and pyroclastics. Younger pyroclastics from Gunung Putri-Eweranda overlap the Talagabodas products in the north. The crater of Talagabodas has shifted 1.3 km north from the summit crater of Canar and contains a large sulfur-saturated lake. Fumaroles, mud pots, and a warm spring are found around the lake, which has an elevated temperature. The age of the most recent eruption is not known. Changes in lake color occurred in 1913 and 1921, and expanded solfataric activity was reported in 1927. Suffocating gases have frequently killed animals that have wandered into the Pajagalan valley on the NE flank and the Kawah Saat geothermal area south of the crater lake. The Kawah Karaha fumaroles 9 km N are also part of the geothermal system (Tripp et al., 2002).

From Wikipedia

Mount Talagabodas or Mount Telagabodas is a stratovolcano in West Java, Indonesia. The volcano is about 25 km to the east of the town of Garut and is built up of andesitic lavas and pyroclastics. Fumaroles, mud pots and hot springs are found around the crater lake. Changes of the lake color occurred in 1913 and 1921. The diameter of crater lake is less than 2 km and lies at an altitude of 1,720 m or 1,020 m above Garut plains.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Read full article

Eruption history

Detailed timeline

No eruption records available.

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.