Times Colonist

New warning after Alaskan volcano erupts

- DAN JOLING

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A volcano in Alaska’s Aleutian Islands spewed ash into flight paths Tuesday, prompting a warning to pilots by the U.S. National Weather Service.

Shishaldin erupted at 5 a.m., the Alaska Volcano Observator­y said. It sent up an initial ash cloud to 19,000 feet. Clouds initially obscured the mountain, but satellite imagery confirmed the ash cloud, U.S. Geological Survey geophysici­st Hans Schwaiger said.

Seismicity diminished for a few hours, but it then increased again. During the increase, the volcano spewed an ash cloud to 25,000 feet, the observator­y said. The later eruption increased the volume of ash.

Wind continued to push the ash cloud northeast into the eastern Bering Sea and away from jets flying between North America and Asia.

However, the National Weather Service upgraded its alert level to a warning. Trace amounts of ash were expected to fall on communitie­s as far away as Sand Point, 225 kilometres east of the volcano. Seismic activity greatly diminished after noon. The eruptions were confirmed by lighting and satellite data, the observator­y said. More explosions could occur or activity could significan­tly decrease with little warning, according to the observator­y.

The observator­y first detected increased seismic activity at the volcano. Elevated surface temperatur­es indicated active lava at the vent in the volcano summit, the observator­y said.

Volcanic ash is angular and sharp and has been used as an industrial abrasive. The powdered rock can cause a jet engine to shut down.

The volcano is 1,093 kilometres southwest of Anchorage near the centre of Unimak Island, the largest island in the Aleutians. False Pass, a village of 40 people, is on the island’s east side. Unless winds change, the cloud would move north of False Pass and would not pose a threat, Schwaiger said.

Shishaldin also erupted Dec. 12, producing an ash cloud that reached up to 25,000 feet, and last Friday, sending an ash cloud to about 24,000 feet.

The volcano is a symmetrica­l cone that is 16 kilometres in diameter at its base. It rises to 2,857 metres and is the highest peak in the Aleutians.

Shishaldin is one of the most active volcanoes in the Aleutian volcanic arc. It has had at least 54 episodes of unrest, including more than 24 confirmed eruptions since 1775, according to the observator­y.

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