Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Volcano spurs warning

Blast may still come, Philippine officials say

- JOEAL CALUPITAN AND BULLIT MARQUEZ

LEGAZPI, Philippine­s — A Philippine volcano that has repeatedly disgorged fountains of lava, ash and molten rock and driven more than 78,000 villagers from their homes remains swollen with magma and could erupt destructiv­ely, an official said Friday.

In its nearly two weeks of erupting, Mount Mayon in the northeaste­rn province of Albay may have ejected roughly 30 percent of its magma, but its swollen sides indicate more molten material may have risen near the crater ahead of a potentiall­y more powerful blast, said Renato Solidum of the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology.

“We still have a significan­t amount within the volcano as it is still inflated,” Solidum told reporters in Legazpi city, Albay’s capital, where life went on normally within sight of the cloud-shrouded volcano.

“It is possible that it can be transforme­d into a more explosive phase … where the actual explosion will be more powerful than what is being shown right now,” he said.

Solidum said the possible explosion could be as powerful as Mayon’s major eruptions during the past 50 years, including one in 2000 in which it blew ash 11 miles into the sky. Some past eruptions have been deadly, including an 1814 blast that buried an entire town in volcanic debris and left 1,200 people dead, but there have been no reports of injuries in its current eruption.

Officials are worried it may continue for months, disrupting the lives and livelihood­s of people in Mayon’s shadow. They also fear that if a storm blows near, heavy rain could wash down thick ash, lava and rocks in rampaging volcanic flows called lahar and devastate villages in its foothills.

A villager, Alicia Marzen, complained of her family’s ordeal in one of the dozens of schools turned into emergency shelters, where children lie on cold floors and some have become sick. “In our room some evacuees have a fever which others acquired because we lay down on the floor,” Marzen said. “Now my grandson has a cough and cold.”

Elsewhere, residents accustomed to Mayon’s fury have gone about their lives as the volcano repeatedly spewed red-hot lava and ash columns into the blue sky over the past weeks, including in Legazpi, where shopping malls, restaurant­s and coffee shops continue to buzz.

One couple reportedly went on with their wedding despite the emergency and had pictures taken with the erupting volcano as a backdrop.

Farmers, however, have had to abandon their rice, vegetable and poultry farms within a 5-mile danger zone around Mayon. The initial damage to agricultur­e alone during the past two weeks has exceeded $2 million, Albay provincial agricultur­al officer Cheryll Ribeta said Thursday.

Mayon has erupted about 50 times in the past 500 years. In 2013, an ash eruption killed five climbers who had ventured near the summit despite warnings.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jim Gomez of The Associated Press.

 ?? AP/BULLIT MARQUEZ ?? Lava flows down the slopes of Mount Mayon in northeaste­rn Philippine­s on Friday. After nearly two weeks of erupting, the volcano shows signs of a more powerful blast, seismologi­sts warned.
AP/BULLIT MARQUEZ Lava flows down the slopes of Mount Mayon in northeaste­rn Philippine­s on Friday. After nearly two weeks of erupting, the volcano shows signs of a more powerful blast, seismologi­sts warned.

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