New analysis of underground gas levels measured at the time of the outburst point the finger to gas exploration -- not an earthquake -- as the trigger, a research team from the United States, Britain and Australia wrote in the journal Nature Geosciences.
"Taken together, our data strongly supports a man-made trigger," study co-author Mark Tingay from the University of Adelaide said in a statement.
The Lusi mud volcano erupted out of the blue on May 29, 2006, in the middle of a rice field in the Sidoarjo district of Java island.
Lusi continues to ooze mud at a rate of some 30,000 to 60,000 cubic metes per day, according to disaster management authorities-- the equivalent of 12-24 Olympic-sized swimming pools of muck.
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More than 6.5 square kilometres (2.5 square miles) of Sidoarjo has been buried in up to 40 metres (130 feet) of mud, said the statement, with costs estimated at over $2.7 billion (2.4 billion euros).
The Indonesian government has erected about 20 kilometres (12 miles) of dykes, some 10 metres high.
Indonesian oil and gas company Lapindo Brantas, which was drilling there at the time, insists on its website that an investigation found no evidence to link its activities to the eruption.
"Lapindo Brantas Inc geological experts believe the mud eruption was linked to seismic activity surrounding an earthquake two days earlier," it states, and points to financial assistance promised to Sidoarjo residents.
The latest research directly contradicts a study published in the same journal almost exactly two years ago, which blamed the quake for the muddy outburst.
That study, led by Stephen Miller at the University of Bonn in Germany, used computer modelling to determine that the quake would have liquefied a clay source of the mud deep underground, and caused it to be injected into a fault.