Mount Asama (浅間山, Asama-yama) is an active complex volcano in central Honshū, the main island of Japan.
The volcano is the most active on Honshū. The Japan Meteorological Agency classifies Mount Asama as rank A. It stands 2,568 metres above sea level on the border of Gunma and Nagano prefectures. It is included in 100 Famous Japanese Mountains.
Mount Asama sits at the conjunction of the Izu-Bonin-Mariana Arc and the Northeastern Japan Arc.
The mountain is built up from non-alkali mafic and pyroclastic volcanic rocks dating from the Late Pleistocene to the Holocene. The main rock type is andesite and dacite.
Scientists from the University of Tokyo and Nagoya University completed their first successful imaging experiment of the interior of the volcano in April 2007. By detecting sub-atomic particles called muons as they passed through the volcano after arriving from space, the scientists were able gradually to build up a picture of the interior, creating images of cavities through which lava was passing deep inside the volcano.
A University of Tokyo volcano observatory is located on the mountain's east slope. Volcanic gas emissions from this volcano are measured by a Multi-Component Gas Analyzer System, which detects pre-eruptive degassing of rising magmas, improving prediction of volcanic activity.
There is also another mountain called Asama (朝熊山, Asama-yama) of only 555 meters in Mie Prefecture.
The geologic features of this active volcano are closely monitored with seismographs and strategically positioned video cameras. Scientists have noted a range of textural variety in the ash which has been deposited in the region during the serial eruptions since the Tennin eruption of 1108.
The eruption of Mount Asama in 1108 (Tennin 1) has been the subject of studies by modern science. Records suggest that the magnitude of this plinian eruption was twice as large as that of the Tenmei catastrophe in 1783.
A Swiss research team found Mount Asama's volcanic eruption could have contributed to extreme weather that caused severe famine, torrential rain and consecutive cold summers in Europe. They studied ice cores in Greenland which had increased sulfate deposition in 1108 CE. In the late Heian Period (794-1185) the diary of the court noble Fujiwara no Munetada reported that Mount Asama erupted on 29 August 1108. He wrote that a local report described rice paddies and fields could not be farmed due to being covered by a thick layer of ash.
More information: Nippon
Mount Asama erupted in 1783 (Tenmei 3), causing widespread damage. The three-month-long plinian eruption that began on 9 May 1783, produced andesitic pumice falls, pyroclastic flows, lava flows, and enlarged the cone.
The climactic eruption began on 4 August and lasted for 15 hours, and contained pumice falls and pyroclastic flows. The complex features of this eruption are explained by rapid deposits of coarse pyroclastic ash near the vent and the subsequent flows of lava; and these events which were accompanied by a high eruption plume which generated further injections of pumice into the air.
The Onioshidashi (Japanese: 鬼押出し) is the name of lava flow on the northern slope of Mount Asama. The lava flow that erupted in 1783 Tenmei eruption was solidified. Now, it is known as a tourist destination.
The Asama Volcano Museum (浅間火山博物館), 4 km from the crater of the Mount Asama, open from 1993 to 2020, explained volcanoes.
The museum was in Naganohara-machi, Agatsuma-gun, Gunma Prefecture. As of early 2009, it was open from April until November.
Visitor numbers peaked at 265,000 in 1994; however, seismic activity at nearby Mount Asama was one reason for frequent closures. The closures were a factor in the drop in visitors this gradually fell to 23,000. In the later years of the museum, most of the visitors were on school excursions.
The museum was running a deficit of about 17 million yen per year, paid for by the town of Naganohara. Additionally, the building was ageing, and maintenance threatened to cost hundreds of millions of yen.
A nearby building, Asama memorial hall (浅間記念館) exhibited motorbikes; the plan in summer 2020 was to move these to a municipally owned tourist facility, Asama pasture (浅間牧場), and to move some of the exhibits of the volcano museum to the memorial hall.
More information: Japan Travel
You behold a range of exhausted volcanoes.
Not a flame flickers on a single pallid crest.
Benjamin Disraeli
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