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Lake Toba

Lake Toba is a large lake, 100km long and 30km wide, in the middle of the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

In 1949 the Dutch geologist Rein van Bemmelen[?] reported that Lake Toba was surrounded by a layer of ignimbrite[?] rocks, and was a large volcanic caldera. Later researchers found rhyolite ash similar to that in the ignimbrite around Toba in Malaysia and India, 3000km away. Oceanographers discovered Toba ash on the floor of the eastern Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal.

The Toba eruption, dated at 75,000 years ago, was the most recent eruption of a "supervolcano." Bill Rose[?] and Craig Chesner[?] of Michigan Technological University deduced that the total amount of erupted material was about 2800km3 -- around 800km3 of ignimbrite that flowed over the ground and around 2000km3 that fell as ash, with the wind blowing most of it to the west. Such a huge eruption probably lasted nearly two weeks. Very few plants or animals in Indonesia would have survived, and it is possible that the eruption caused a planet-wide die-off. There is some evidence, based on mitochondrial DNA, that the human race was reduced to only a few thousand individuals by the Toba eruption.

A large area collapsed after the ejection of that amount of subsurface material, forming a caldera, which filled with water creating Lake Toba. Later, the floor of the caldera uplifted to form Samosir[?], a large island in the lake. Such uplifts are common in very large calderas, apparently due to the upward pressure of unerupted magma. Toba is probably the largest resurgent caldera on Earth.

There have been no historic eruptions at Toba, but large earthquakes have occurred, the most recent in 1987 along the southern shore of the lake.



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