Explosions are really loud. But how loud have the loudest gotten?

On August 27, 1883, the volcanic island of Krakatoa erupted, producing the loudest sound ever recorded by humans.

The explosion was heard over 3,000 miles away, rupturing eardrums 40 miles from the site and shattering windows in distant towns.

The sound, estimated at 310 dB, was far louder than any modern jet engine, with the force of 200 megatons of TNT.

This is so astonishingly loud, that itโ€™s inching up against the limits of what we mean by โ€œsound.โ€

Nautilus has a fascinating description of the absolutely enormous sound produced by the eruption.

“When you hum a note or speak a word, youโ€™re wiggling air molecules back and forth dozens or hundreds of times per second, causing the air pressure to be low in some places and high in other places. The louder the sound, the more intense these wiggles, and the larger the fluctuations in air pressure. But thereโ€™s a limit to how loud a sound can get.

At some point, the fluctuations in air pressure are so large that the low pressure regions hit zero pressureโ€”a vacuumโ€”and you canโ€™t get any lower than that. This limit happens to be about 194 decibels for a sound in Earthโ€™s atmosphere. Any louder, and the sound is no longer just passing through the air, itโ€™s actually pushing the air along with it, creating a pressurized burst of moving air known as a shock wave.

Closer to Krakatoa, the sound was well over this limit, producing a blast of high pressure air so powerful that it ruptured the eardrums of sailors 40 miles away.

As this sound travelled thousands of miles, reaching Australia and the Indian Ocean, the wiggles in pressure started to die down, sounding more like a distant gunshot. Over 3,000 miles into its journey, the wave of pressure grew too quiet for human ears to hear, but it continued to sweep onward, reverberating for days across the globe. The atmosphere was ringing like a bell, imperceptible to us but detectable by our instruments.”

 


An 1888 lithograph of the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa

The eruption triggered massive tsunamis, some over 100 feet high, and killed around 36,000 people. Ash clouds from the eruption blanketed the Earth, creating vivid sunsets and dropping global temperatures by 1.2ยฐC in a phenomenon known as a โ€œvolcanic winter.โ€ These changes in the atmosphere lasted for years, affecting weather worldwide.

 

Krakatoaโ€™s eruption became a global event, reported quickly via telegraph. Its aftermath influenced the study of volcanology, atmospheric science, and sound waves, as the explosionโ€™s sonic waves circled the globe seven times.

This extraordinary eruption remains a powerful reminder of natureโ€™s destructive force and lasting impact.

 

Photograph of the eruption in 1883.

 

It’s wild to think about the sound traveling so far, and becoming like a weapon as it traveled from the site of the eruption.

Imagining what the eruption might have looked like.

 

The explosion was heard 3,110 kilometres (1,930 mi) away in Perth, Western Australia, and Rodrigues near Mauritius, 4,800 kilometres (3,000 mi) away

Famous Painting Connection?

Even more amazing, some historians and meteorologists believe that the iconic “The Scream” painting by Edvard Munch depicts the red skies over Norway that were caused by the Krakatoa eruption.

A famous painting titled 'The Scream' by Edvard Munch, showcasing a figure with an agonized expression against a backdrop of swirling orange and blue skies.
In 2004, an astronomer suggested that the blood-red sky shown inย Edvard Munch‘s famous 1893 paintingย The Screamย depicts the sky overย Norwayย after the eruption.
A dramatic painting of the Krakatoa volcano erupting, capturing the explosion with fiery orange and dark volcanic ash against a muted background.
An illustration of the massive explosion.

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10 Comments

  1. Yes, it was tremendously violent, even more so that the biggest nuclear explosion ever.

  2. It’s a great question, and the science behind it is a bit murky. Encyclopedia Brittanica has a graph listing the loudest sounds ever. We imagine it was “calculated”, versus recorded as the loudest sound ever. Our article lists it as Loudest Sound Ever Heard, we believe 1440 may have slightly mis-titled that concept.

  3. Carol Schmidt

    If human eardrums were ruptured that far away, I cringe to think about the thousands of animals that might have been affected. I’m no scientist, but I would wager there were a LOT of dead birds as well as other species.

  4. JoeCascio

    It says loudest sound ever recorded, but I didn’t see any way to actually hear what was recorded. What did I miss?

  5. Lloyd Berger

    What method was used to record the sound of Krakatoa? Your article says, “On August 27, 1883, the volcanic island of Krakatoa erupted, producing the loudest sound ever recorded by humans.” But Wikipedia says, “The earliest known audio tape recorder was patented in 1886 by Alexander Graham Bell’s Volta Laboratory. This device used a wax-covered paper strip to record sound, marking the beginning of sound recording technology.” Just asking out of curiosity.
    1

  6. Tam GRANATO

    So informative in such a unique and interesting way!!! Really enjoy this site!

  7. butterfly9591

    Terrible for the people living back then just awful

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