Classroom lesson 路 Volcanoes馃嚠馃嚛 Indonesia

The land of volcanoes

More active volcanoes than anywhere else on Earth

Mount Bromo at sunrise, with mist drifting around the volcanic cones in Java

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Indonesia has around 130 active volcanoes - more than any other country in the world. They form a long line along the islands, almost like beads on a string. Many sit quietly for years; some puff small clouds of steam into the sky.

Tell me more

A volcano is a kind of mountain with a passage that goes deep down to the hot middle of the Earth. The reason Indonesia has so many is that it sits where two giant pieces of the Earth's surface, called tectonic plates, meet. When two plates push against each other, the rock down below gets hot, and sometimes a path opens up and the heat reaches the surface.

Indonesia is part of a larger ring of volcanoes that goes all the way around the Pacific Ocean. Scientists call it the Pacific Ring of Fire - even though there isn't actually any fire, just very, very hot rock far below.

Living near a volcano sounds strange, but it has a wonderful side. Old volcano ash is one of the richest soils on Earth - full of minerals plants love. That is why farms in places like Java grow such healthy rice, vegetables and coffee. Some of the most beautiful rice fields in the world climb the slopes of old volcanoes.

One of the most famous volcanoes in Indonesia is Mount Bromo on the island of Java. People wake up before dawn to watch the sun rise over its misty crater, while smaller cones around it sit like a row of sleeping giants. Indonesia's tallest volcano, Mount Kerinci, is 3,805 metres - higher than most ski lifts in the Alps.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might farmers actually want to live near a volcano?
  2. 02If two pieces of the Earth's surface push against each other, what would you expect to happen along the edge?
  3. 03What would it feel like to live in a place where a mountain is part of every view?
Try this

Classroom activity

Build a paper-cone 'volcano' as a class. Inside, draw a long passage going down into the Earth and label the layers. Add a label for one helpful thing volcanoes give us (rich soil), one thing they make (steam, hot springs), and one safety rule scientists follow when watching them.