The Internet now harbours vast amounts of cheap and potentially useful remo
te sensing data. Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) data are
being increasingly used for volcano surveillance, and the provision of AVHR
R Global Area Coverage (GAC) imagery at no cost over the Internet offers th
e possibility of cheap volcano monitoring on a global scale. Herein we use
an extensive, 690-scene AVHRR GAC dataset to observe Volcanic activity in t
he Indonesian island are between January 1996 and November 1997. Indonesia
contains over 70 active volcanoes, with styles of activity during the obser
vation period including active lava domes, lava flows, pyroclastic flows an
d hot crater lakes, many in close proximity to major centres of population.
The detection potential of these and other phenomena in GAC data is assess
ed. Thermal anomalies were identified at similar to 18 volcanoes during the
observation period, including lava flows at Anak Krakatau, persistent open
-vent activity at Semeru and a previously unreported eruption at Sangeang A
pi volcano. Using these results, a classification scheme for night-time Ind
onesian GAC data is presented. Routine use of freely available high tempora
l resolution data such as AVHRR GAC could help elucidate cyclic activity at
active volcanoes, which would contribute significantly to hazard mitigatio
n in affected areas. Browse images of higher resolution data (e.g. SPOT) fr
om the daily updated archives of the Centre for Remote Imaging, Sensing and
Processing (CRISP) in Singapore also show potential as an aid to volcano m
onitoring in the region.