Oroville Mercury-Register

Lava from Spanish island volcano rolls toward the sea

- By Daniel Roca and Barry Hatton

LOS LLANOS DE ARIDANE, CANARY ISLANDS » Lava flowing from a volcano in Spain’s Canary Islands picked up its pace on its way to the sea Tuesday, but scientists said it was impossible to estimate when the black-and-red stream of molten rock would reach the shore.

Authoritie­s said the lava had moved on the island of La Palma to within 800 meters (875 yards) of the Atlantic Ocean as of Tuesday morning, nine days after the volcano’s eruption. When it eventually meets sea water, the lava could trigger explosions and the release of toxic gas.

By the afternoon, officials said various factors dictated the unpredicta­ble speed of the lava flow, including its departure from a path over an earlier flow that had hardened. The river of cooled lava had helped the moving flow slide along.

“The lava cools down as time passes and it meets uneven ground, which slows it down,” said Miguel Ángel Morcuende, technical director of the Canary Islands emergency volcano response department. “And if it comes off the highway it was going along, that slows it even more because it spreads out wider.”

A small hill and a builtup area also stood in the lava’s way, and the shore area is flatter than the hills the lava has been flowing down.

For days, officials have nervously awaited the time when lava from the Sept. 19 eruption reaches the Atlantic, but the volcano has been erratic. After calming down on Monday, the volcano became more explosive again overnight.

Authoritie­s said they don’t expect the slowmoving lava to create a large disruption on the coast. But Eugenio Fraile, a researcher at the Spanish Oceanograp­hy Institute, told Cadena Ser radio that only scientists wearing protective gear will be inside a security perimeter when the flow hits the ocean.

The National Geographic Institute detected six earthquake­s Tuesday in the area of the eruption, with the strongest measured at magnitude 3.3.

La Palma, home to about 85,000 people, is part of the volcanic Canary Islands, an archipelag­o off northwest Africa. The island is roughly 35 kilometers (22 miles) long and 20 kilometers (12 miles) wide at its broadest point.

Lava from the eruption has devoured everything in its path, destroying 589 buildings and 21 kilometers (13 miles) of roads on La Palma. The lava now covers 258 hectares (637 acres), mostly farmland, according to a European Union satellite monitoring agency.

No deaths or serious injuries have been reported, thanks to the prompt evacuation­s of over 6,000 people.

But local people have lost their homes and their livelihood­s at the same time. Farming is one of the island’s economic mainstays, along with tourism, and the lava and ash has ruined crops and irrigation systems, endangered aviation and poses a significan­t health risk to those nearby.

No flights went in or out of La Palma’s airport for a fourth straight day because of a huge ash cloud. Volcanic ash is hazardous for aircraft engines.

 ?? LUISMI ORTIZ — UME ?? Military Emergency Unit personal take gas reading measuremen­ts near a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain, in the early hours of Tuesday.
LUISMI ORTIZ — UME Military Emergency Unit personal take gas reading measuremen­ts near a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain, in the early hours of Tuesday.
 ?? SAUL SANTOS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain, in the early hours of Tuesday.
SAUL SANTOS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain, in the early hours of Tuesday.

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