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Exciting news! The mountain my friend and I were planning to climb this month has experienced a minor eruption. Early Monday morning, Mt. Asama coughed up smoke and glowing rocks. The mountain has been quiet the last few months but swelling beneath the crater has been increasing. A medium-sized eruption can be expected soon. Ash from this week's activity fell across several cities in the Kanto Area, including in Tokyo and over parts of Chiba Prefecture.

Asamayama, as it is known in Japanese, has a long eruption history and the current crater is actually set atop three older volcanoes. Kurofuyama is now just part of the crater rim of the original volcano. Later another cone built up in the crater of Kurofuyama, and that was in turn destroyed and replaced by Maekakeyama. Basically, the volcanic cone sitting in the old Kurofuyama crater is known as Maekakeyama, however, the whole volcano which has been coughing up smoke and lava over the centuries is known as Asamayama – currently 2,568 metres high.

Looking over the eruption history of Asama it seems to have erupted four to six times every century, including a very big eruption in 1108. During the 1700s the volcano erupted 21 times! Asama’s most famous eruption was in the summer of 1783. A great flow of lava emerged and oozed down the mountainside. Volcanic ejecta dammed the course of the Tone River – Japan’s second longest river – and many villages and hamlets were flooded. The river found a new course and went through the northern Kanto Plains causing more flooding. Where it used to empty into Tokyo Bay the Tone River changed course and now empties into the Pacific Ocean further north along the borders of Chiba and Ibaraki Prefectures. The lava flow is now a tourist attraction called “Onioshidashi” – basically Devil Push Out. I have been there two or three times.

In the last hundred years Asama has seen some major eruptions where great clouds of ash billowed from the crater. From 1899 to 1921 eruption activity was recorded almost every year and then several times a year in some years. From then until 1965 activity was recorded every two or three years. The next big bang came in 1973 and then it was quiet again until 1981 and 1982 when more great clouds of ash issued from the crater. I recall the medium-sized eruption of September 1, 2004 when a loud pop sent rocks hurtling over a kilometer from the crater. Though I didn’t see it for myself I saw photos of orange glowing clouds at night. One morning I went to get my bicycle and found a thin layer of fine ash.

My visits to Asama have mostly been from nearby although in May of 2006 I climbed up Kurofuyama with a friend and we got a clear view of the crater with white smoke billowing into the blue sky. Of all the several dozens of times I have seen Asamayama either from nearby or from far away only once have I ever not seen smoke. That was in February of 2007 when my co-worker and two friends attempted to climb to the crater. Though I had read about poisonous gases at the crater we had prepared ourselves and brought gas masks. We never needed them. First because the danger level was one, meaning it is safe to approach the crater (level 2 means you cannot approach the crater and level 3 means you must avoid entering a four-kilometre radius around the crater, which is the current danger level). The other reason was because the top of the mountain was too icy for our gear and we had to give up.

Since then my co-worker has been after me to take him back there. So just last week we were discussing the hike. Now it seems we’ll have to sneak up to Kurofuyama at night in order to hopefully get some glowing crater shots and then stay for the morning and hope to see some action. But we won’t be able to go until the 21st so we have to hope that Asamayama keeps up with the hot action but doesn’t go too wild. We don’t want to be kept out altogether if possible.



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Comments

  • diabolicdame said on Feb 03, 2009....
    Hey I read about this in the paper!! You sound a lot more excited than anybody would expect you to about a volcano eruption!! hehehe.. hope you get great shots ad dont melt up there!  :-)
  • quietone said on Feb 03, 2009....
    They sure will be awesome shots!!! But I would be afraid to be any where close to that thing.  I guess I don't understand, but I would sure like to see the shots too.  Stay safe hotaka if you make it up there.
  • woman said on Feb 03, 2009....
    I understand your excitement and attraction to this volcano. ( your photos are terrific)I travel to Central America and have gone part way up Vocan Pacaya. It is an active volcano with lava flow, though not a significant destructive eruption since the 80's.You can usually see the lava flow at night from a distance. My daughter traveled with me to Guatemala last year, climbed to the top with friends and dipped a stick in the lava. Once in Hawaii I watched the lava flow from a volcano at night. Very impressive. You be careful though Hotaka. There's danger in that beauty.
  • hotaka said on Feb 03, 2009....
    diabolicD, Asama is a fairly regular erupter so there's usually no pyroclastic cloud or major poisonous gas cloud. For the most part you can just stand below or on a neighbouring mountain and watch and just be sure to stay upwind of the ash.

    quietone, I just hope that 1) we actually can get up to the old crater rim for the view across to the newer cone and 2) that the mountain is actually doing something that weekend. Unlike the pros I can't just take off whenever the mountain hiccoughs.

    woman, I think I saw that mountain on TV. A Japanese crew went up there with a bathtub. They filled the tub with water and a comedian got inside. Then they scooped a big fresh lava rock and dropped it in the tub. The comedian freaked and jumped out but actually the temperature only went up to 25 degrees C. I went to Hawaii to see lava a few years ago but at that time the volcano had gone quiet and I could only see the lava from far away at night. Next time I hope to see it much closer. I am a bit of a volcano buff and I have visited Mt. Saint Helens, some steaming volcanoes in Japan and a few dormant volcanoes in Canada. I find them very exciting but I know the danger. Lava is not the problem. It's poisonous gases, ejecta and pyroclastic clouds. With Asama it's mostly ejecta that we have to be aware of.
  • kruuyai said on Feb 04, 2009....
    When I first read this post, I thought you said Mt. Asthma... that would explain a few splutters.  I hope you get to see some action without taking any risks.  Please be careful so you can come back and tell us about it.  ;-)  Having once been a geologist, I'm interested in volcanoes too, but the closest I ever got was flying my kite at the foot of Mt. Hekla (in Iceland) 7 months after it erupted.  Standing on relatively fresh ash was pretty cool, though.

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