The Philippine Star

Rains trigger lahar flow from Mayon

- By CELSO AMO With Helen Flores

LEGAZPI CITY – Lahar from Mayon Volcano flowed in the Anoling river channel in Daraga, Albay due to rains spawned by Tropical Storm Basyang, an official of the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology said yesterday.

Ed Laguerta, Mayon resident volcanolog­ist, said pyroclasti­c materials also flowed in other river channels and in the Miisi, Bonga and Basud gulllies.

Laguerta said about 15.5 million cubic meters of pyroclasti­c density currents are deposited in the gullies and river channels of Quirangay, Miisi, Mabinti, Buyuan, Matanag and Basud.

“We are coordinati­ng with city and municipal disaster risk reduction and management officers in Daraga, Camalig, Guinobatan and Ligao as well as in Bacacay, Sto. Domingo and Tabaco to determine the volume of possible lahar deposits for evacuation response,” Cedric Daep, Albay provincial security and emergency management of- fice (Apsemo) head, said.

“Our long-term threat is lahar when all those pyroclasti­c density currents from the slope of Mayon are slowly brought down by heavy rains,” Daep said.

He said Apsemo is monitoring the amount of rainfall even though the Philippine Atmospheri­c, Geophysica­l and Astronomic Services Administra­tion gave assurance that Basyang would not bring torrential rains.

Mayon’s activity in the past 24 hours was characteri­zed by sporadic and weak lava fountainin­g, lava flow and degassing from the crater.

On Tuesday night, lava flows and incandesce­nt rockfalls were observed in the Miisi and Bonga-Buyuan channels.

At least 94 volcanic earthquake­s, most of which correspond­ed to lava fountainin­g, were recorded by Mayon’s seismic monitoring network.

The public is advised to be vigilant and avoid entering the eight-kilometer-radius danger zone as the volcano remains under Alert Level 4.

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