
On May 8, 1902, on the Caribbean island of Martinique, the volcano Mount Pelée loosed the most terrifying and lethal eruption of the twentieth century. In minutes, it killed 27,000 people and leveled the city of Saint-Pierre. In La Catastrophe, Alwyn Scarth provides a gripping day-by-day and hour-by-hour account of this devastating eruption, based primarily on chilling eyewitness accounts. Scarth recounts how, for many days before the great eruption, a series of smaller eruptions spewed dust and ash. Then came the eruption. A blinding flash lit up the sky. A tremendous cannonade roared out that was heard in Venezuela. Then a scorching blast of superheated gas and ash shot straight down towards Saint-Pierre, racing down at hundreds of miles an hour. This infernal avalanche of dark, billowing, reddish-violet fumes, flashing lightning, ash and rocks, crashed and rolled headlong, destroying everything in its path--public buildings, private homes, the town hall, the Grand Hotel. Temperatures inside the cloud reached 450 degrees Celsius. Virtually everyone in Saint-Pierre died within minutes. Scarth tells of many lucky escapes--the ship Topaze left just hours before the eruption, a prisoner escaped death in solitary confinement. But these were the fortunate few. An official delegation sent later that day by the mayor of Fort-de-France reported total devastation--no quays, no trees, only shattered facades. Saint-Pierre was a smoldering ruin. In the tradition of A Perfect Storm and Isaac's Storm, but on a much larger scale, La Catastrophe takes readers inside the greatest volcanic eruption of the century and one of the most tragic natural disasters of all time.
This work investigates the catastrophic eruption of Mount Pelée in 1902 to determine the sequence of events that led to the near-total destruction of Saint-Pierre. Alwyn Scarth, a scholar of volcanic activity, synthesizes historical records and primary source documentation to reconstruct the disaster. The book argues that the scale of the tragedy was exacerbated by a combination of geological volatility and the failure to recognize the warning signs provided by the volcano in the days preceding the final eruption.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and readers frequently cite this work as a definitive and harrowing account of the 1902 eruption. The prose is noted for its meticulous attention to detail and its reliance on primary source material to build a clinical yet vivid historical record.
Page Count:
257
Publication Date:
2002-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190293578
ISBN-13:
9780190293574
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!