GEOGRAPHY
An Island
Built by Volcanoes
Every
aspect of Bali's geography and ecology is influenced by the
towering range of volcanic peaks that dominate the island.
They have created its landforms, periodically regenerated
its soils,and helped to produce the dramatic downpours which
provide the island with life-giving water. The Balinese recognize
these geophysical facts of life, and the island's many volcanoes,
lakes and springs are considered by them to be sacred.
Bali is
continually being formed by volcanic action. The island lies
over a major subduction zone where the Indo-Australian plate
collides with the rigid Sunda plate with explosive results.
A violent eruption of Mt. Agung (3,142 m before the eruption;
3,014 in now) in 1963 showered the mountain's upper slopes
with ash and debris that slid off as mudflows, killing thousands
of people and laying waste to irrigation networks and rice
fields that had been built up over many years. Mt Batur (1,717
in) to the west is also active, with greater frequency but
less violence.
A mild,
equatorial climate
Lying between
8 and 9 degrees south of the equator, Bali has a short, hot
wet season and a longer, cooler dry season. The mountains
are wet year round, averaging 2,500 to 3,000 mm (100 to 120
inches) of rain annually, with warm days and cool nights.
The lowlands are hotter and drier, but fresh and persistent
winds make the climate less oppressive here than elsewhere
in the equatorial zone.
The wet
season lasts from November to March, and though there are
only five or six hours of sunshine a day, this is also the
hottest time of year (30-31" C by day, 24-25o C at night).
The dry season is from April to October, when southeasterly
winds blow up from the cool Australian interior (28-29o C
by day, and a pleasant 23" C at night), with seven or
eight hours of sunshine daily.
By
itself, the rainfall in the lowlands is not enough for wet
rice cultivation. In other parts of Indonesia, particularly
Java, flood waters following heavy rains can be collected
behind dams, but the steep, narrow valleys of Bali offer no
good dam sites. Over the centuries, the Balinese have instead
devised many sophisticated irrigation systems which optimize
the water available from rain and rivers.
Bali's
volcanic soils are in fact not naturally well-suited to wet
rice cultivation. They are deep, finely textured and well-drained,
so water soaks through them rapidly. While this reduces the
risk of floods, it wastes precious water. Paradoxically, the
solution is vigorous and repeated plugging, which actually
renders the soils less permeable. Irrigated areas, moreover,
receive a supply of nutrients from river water enriched by
domestic effluents.
Man has
extensively modified the natural vegetation of Bali. The moist
primary forest which is its natural vegetation now covers
only 1,010 sq km or 19 percent of Bali's total area, mainly
in the western mountains and along the arc of volcanic peaks
from Agung to Batukau. About a quarter of the forest is protected
in four nature reserves, the largest of which is Bali Barat
National Park (763 sq km. Further reserves are planned to
protect another quarter of the island's forests.
An island
of great contrasts
Bali may
be small, but its physical geography is complex, creating
an island of great contrasts. In simple outline, three major
areas emerge - the mountains, the coastal lowlands and the
limestone fringes. The mountains are lofty and spectacular,
dominated by Mt Agung and its neighbors, Abang and Batur.
Dramatic lava flows on the northeastern flanks of Agung are
Bali's newest landforms, showing what the entire island probably
looked like a million years ago.
The western
mountains provide the last major wildlife sanctuary. Cultivation
is here limited to coastal areas that are very dry in the
north, but more prosperous and fertile in the south. Coconut
groves, cattle pastures and rain fed fields line the foothills
while rice fields are found along the coast. Unique canals
vanish into foothill tunnels excavated as protection from
landslides. In the extreme southwest, the new Palasari Dam
forms the island's only manmade lake. On Bali's western tip,
the coral reefs and clear waters around Menjangan Island provide
fantastic scuba diving.
The southern
lowlands formed the cradle of Balinese civilization. Here
it is possible to grow two or more irrigated rice crops per
year. Based on this agricultural surplus, eight small but
powerful kingdoms arose, symmetrically lining the parallel
north-south river valleys that shaped their early growth.
In contrast
to the south, the north coast hosted only a single kingdom,
centered on the less extensive but equally productive rice
lands around Singaraja. Terracing here continues well into
the hills, on slopes which elsewhere would be regarded as
a severe erosion hazard. In Bali, these terraces stand as
firm as masonry because of peculiar clay minerals within the
soil. Further east, the dry coast is relieved by several major
springs which emerge from fissures in the lava flows. The
spring water is used for irrigating table grapes, a crop that
thrives here.
The
southern limestone fringes stand in complete contrast to the
rest of Bali. These are dry and difficult to cultivate. The
Bukit Peninsula south of the airport has impressive southern
cliffs and many large caves. Across the sea to the east, Nusa
Ceningan, Nusa Lembongan and Nusa Penida are dry limestone
islands with scrubby vegetation and shallow soils. Villagers
on Penida have built ingenious catchments to collect rainwater.
Springs also emerge from the base of its high southern cliffs,
and villagers scramble down precarious scaffolds to collect
water. just as water is the measure of richness in the interior,
so is it the measure of survival around the periphery. In
Bali, water is truly sacred.