Talk:Oruanui eruption

Latest comment: 3 years ago by 1.43.220.218 in topic Any humans around?

Citations satisfactory edit

The Wikipedia article does not go into much detail (but lacks a "stub" marker); for more information, readers are pointed to a couple of more technical research sites, where it seems the real meat is hidden away behind a paywall.

This is obviously not satisfactory. Recommendations: either flesh out the article, or provide more citations, especially whose content is freely accessible by anyone who has an interest, or of course do both. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 74.104.131.76 (talk) 17:42, 10 April 2007 (UTC).Reply

I've marked the article as a stub, and labeled the references so as not to imply they are the next step for readers. Two of them require payment, but one is freely accessible. Wikipedia has no policy preferring free sources. -- Avenue 22:36, 10 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Style caution edit

Hate to be a barbarian, but this article probably reads well for anyone trained or well-read in vulcanology/geology, but is overly technical for most other readers. Many technical terms are used, and some are not defined or linked. The avergae (intelligent) reader, I am afraid, may need the technicalities relegated to a lower section, while an introductory section explains the causes, significance and effects of the eruption in less technical, more prosaic, style. In my humble opinion... --Iacobus (talk) 05:26, 2 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Image edit

The image I added was removed :( with the edit summary: Unencyclopedic picture.
Not sure in what way they meant, but to make sure it was accurate I used this page to get an idea of how light colored rhyolite is, and this page to get an idea of where the ash went. Anynobody 01:04, 26 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

I think "artist's impressions" like this are hard to do well, and I would be quite cautious about using one here. We have no records from anyone who has seen such a huge eruption, so a lot of it would be guesswork. Problems with yours include the absence of any sign of pyroclastic falls and flows, which are vital here. The ash cloud also seems to missing the target, if I'm following it right. You seem to show the heaviest ashfall going to the south, around Wellington, and the ash missing East Cape and even Hawkes Bay (one of the worst hit areas) entirely. -- Avenue (talk) 01:54, 26 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

They can be difficult, but on the other hand since there were no human witnesses it does afford me some luxuries. One of them is not setting the viewer at 40k ft and calling it space, so I tried from a new perspective. (PS The direction of ash fall hasn't been changed, it's still e-se but that should be much more apparent now.) Anynobody 05:22, 26 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

Yes, the direction seems better now, although the extent of the ash cloud seems very small. There is also still no indication of the huge pyroclastic flows in the central North Island. Some of this was deposited early in the eruptive sequence, while the biggest eruptions (which is what I assume you're trying to show) came towards the end. Another issue is that the eruption occurred during the last ice age, but modern coastlines and vegetation are shown. For instance, the North and South Islands were joined at the time (see Figure 2, Manville & Wilson for details). I'm not saying every little thing needs to be perfect, but I think these are pretty glaring inaccuracies. -- Avenue (talk) 13:09, 26 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

I completely understand your concerns, and the difficulty comes from what I understand to be a complicated eruption. I imagine this column being a few to fifteen minutes old, but not the first one either. In the new version several fires have been burning from an earlier eruption the previous day (kind of enabling one to understand how much higher the eruption column goes. I wanted to emphasize the height involved with ashfall 10cm thick on Chatham Island.) If this is accurate: The eruption column was followed by a devastating pyroclastic flow, blanketing a roughly circular area within 80 kilometres of Lake Taupō with ignimbrite, and destroying all life in its path. Then the major pyroclastic flows have yet to occur at the time depicted.

Do you think I should work on a two or three image series to illustrate various phases? Anynobody 04:11, 27 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

Effect on New zeland's ecosystem ? edit

I guess this event had dramatic effects on the NZ ecosystem. Would be interesting to get some infos on thats. --Yug (talk) 16:18, 28 July 2016 (UTC)Reply

Any humans around? edit

Was NZ settled at that time? --Waqqashanafi (talk) 05:42, 2 June 2018 (UTC)Reply

No1.43.220.218 (talk) 05:43, 14 July 2020 (UTC)Reply