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The work of the Kraffts was highlighted in a video issue of [[National Geographic Channel|National Geographic]], which contained a large amount of their film footage and photographs as well as interviews with both.
The work of the Kraffts was highlighted in a video issue of [[National Geographic Channel|National Geographic]], which contained a large amount of their film footage and photographs as well as interviews with both.
Maurice is famous for saying in the video that "I am never afraid because I have seen so much eruptions in 23 years that even if I die tomorrow, I don't care", coincidentally on the day before his and his wife's death at Mt. Unzen.<ref>{{cite video |date=2003 | title=Volcano: Nature's Inferno | medium=videorecording | location=Washington, DC | publisher=National Geographic Society}}</ref>
Maurice is famous for saying in the video that .<ref>{{cite video |date=2003 | title=Volcano: Nature's Inferno | medium=videorecording | location=Washington, DC | publisher=National Geographic Society}}</ref>


== Books ==
== Books ==

Revision as of 14:53, 30 April 2014

Katia and Maurice Krafft
Katia and Maurice Krafft
BornApril 17, 1942 (Katia),
March 25, 1946 (Maurice)
DiedJune 3, 1991(1991-06-03) (aged 49) (Katia)
June 3, 1991(1991-06-03) (aged 45) (Maurice)
Cause of deathKilled by the 1991 eruption of Mt. Unzen
NationalityFrench

Katia Krafft (née Catherine Joséphine Conrad, Mulhouse, 17 April 1942 – 3 June 1991) and her husband, Maurice Krafft (Guebwiller, 25 March 1946 – 3 June 1991) were French volcanologists who died in a pyroclastic flow on Mount Unzen, in Japan, on June 3, 1991. The Kraffts were known for being pioneers in filming, photographing and recording volcanoes, often getting within feet of lava flows. Their obituary appeared in the Bulletin of Volcanology (vol. 54, pp. 613–614).

Early days

Katia Conrad and Maurice Krafft met at the University of Strasbourg, and their career as volcano observers began soon after. With little money, they saved up for a trip to Stromboli and photographed its near-continuous eruption. Finding that people were interested in this documentation of eruptions, they soon made a career out of this, which afforded them the ability to travel the globe. They were married in 1970.

As professional volcanologists

The Kraffts were often the first to arrive at an active volcano[example needed], and were respected and envied by many volcanologists.[citation needed] Their footage of the effects of volcanic eruptions was a considerable factor in gaining the cooperation of local authorities[who?] faced with volcanic threats[example needed]. One notable example of this was after the onset of activity at Mount Pinatubo in 1991, where their video of the effects of the eruption of Nevado del Ruiz in Colombia was shown to large numbers of people, including Philippine President Cory Aquino, and convinced many skeptics that evacuation of the area would be necessary.[citation needed]

The Mount Unzen eruption

In June 1991, while filming eruptions at Mount Unzen, they were caught in a pyroclastic flow which unexpectedly swept out of a channel other flows had been following and onto the ridge they were standing on. They were killed instantly, along with 41 people including Professor Harry Glicken, several firemen and journalists also covering the eruptions.

The work of the Kraffts was highlighted in a video issue of National Geographic, which contained a large amount of their film footage and photographs as well as interviews with both. Maurice is famous for saying in the video that .[1]

Books

Maurice Krafft
    • Guide des volcans d’Europe : généralités, France, Islande, Italie, Grèce, Allemagne..., Neuchâtel: Delachaux et Niestlé, 1974, 412 pp.
    • Questions à un vulcanologue : Maurice Krafft répond, Paris: Hachette-Jeunesse, 1981, 231 pp.
    • Les Volcans et leurs secrets, Paris: Nathan, 1984, 63 pp.
    • Le Monde merveilleux des volcans, Paris: Hachette-Jeunesse, 1981, 58 pp.
    • Les Feux de la Terre, Histoire de volcans, Paris: Découvertes Gallimard, 208 pp.
Maurice and Katia Krafft
    • À l’assaut des volcans, Islande, Indonésie, Paris: Presses de la Cité, 1975, 112 pp.
    • Preface by Eugène Ionesco, Les Volcans, Paris: Draeger-Vilo, 1975, 174 pp.
    • La Fournaise, volcan actif de l’île de la Réunion, Saint-Denis: Éditions Roland Benard, 1977, 121 pp.
    • Volcans, le réveil de la Terre, Paris: Hachette-Réalités, 1979, 158 pp.
    • Dans l’antre du Diable : volcans d’Afrique, Canaries et Réunion, Paris: Presses de la Cité, 1981, 124 pp.
    • Volcans et tremblements de terre, Paris: Les Deux Coqs d’Or, 1982, 78 pp.
    • Volcans et dérives des continents, Paris: Hachette, 1984, 157 pp.
    • Les plus beaux volcans, d’Alaska en Antarctique et Hawaï, Paris: Solar, 1985, 88 pp.
    • Volcans et éruptions, Paris: Hachette-Jeunesse, 1985, 90 pp.
    • Les Volcans du monde, Vevey-Lausanne: Éditions Mondo, 1986, 152 pp.
    • Objectif volcans, Paris: Nathan Image, 1986, 154 pp.
    • Führer zu den Virunga Vulkanen, Stuttgart: F. Enke, 1990, 187 pp.
Maurice Krafft and Roland Benard
    • Au cœur de la Fournaise, Orléans: Éditions Nourault-Bénard, 1986, 220 pp.
Maurice Krafft, Katia Krafft et François-Dominique de Larouzière
    • Guide des volcans d'Europe et des Canaries, Neuchâtel: Delachaux et Niestlé, 1991, 455 pp.

References

  1. ^ Volcano: Nature's Inferno (videorecording). Washington, DC: National Geographic Society. 2003.

External links