asakiyume: actually nyiragongo (ruby lake)
asakiyume ([personal profile] asakiyume) wrote2014-01-13 10:36 am

the world's most metal job

. . . has surely got to be working in the sulfur mines in the crater of Kawah Ijen, a volcano in East Java, Indonesia. Stop and think a moment. Sulfur mining. In a volcano.

It's a world of fire, acid, and poisonous gases.

(There is an acid lake in the crater.)


Molten sulfur is blood red, but it burns with a blue flame. The photographer Olivier Grunewald took these photos, which ran in the Boston Globe on 8 December 2010. (Source for the entire photo essay here.) (Hat tip to [livejournal.com profile] yamamanama for showing me these!)

sulfur flames

image © Olivier Grunewald


image © Olivier Grunewald

molten sulfur

image © Olivier Grunewald


The Boston Globe had another photo essay on the mine on 1 June 2009, focused more on the hard-labor aspects. Workers pry the raw mineral sulfur out by hand and carry it down the mountain in heavy-laden baskets, on their backs ...


photo by Ulet Ifansati


photo by Ulet Ifansati

In conclusion. If you want to do a Cracked list about working in actual hellish circumstances, don't leave out the sulfur mine of Kawah Ijen.


[identity profile] yamamanama.livejournal.com 2014-01-14 06:06 am (UTC)(link)
That truly is amazing.
Sulphur isn't a metal, though.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2014-01-14 11:47 pm (UTC)(link)
True: it's a nonmetal mineral, like coal. (I didn't say it was a metal--I said the workers were carrying out mineral sulfur)

[identity profile] yamamanama.livejournal.com 2014-01-15 01:43 am (UTC)(link)
The job is still metal, even if they don't work with any metals.