The Star Malaysia

‘Ring of Fire’ unleashes its wrath

Volcano eruptions of late remind Asia of its seismic peril.

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THE string of active volcanos around the Pacific Ocean has lived up to its “Ring of Fire” name lately, sparking mass evacuation­s in Indonesia and Vanuatu and unsettling part of southweste­rn Japan. The 450 or so volcanos that make up the ring outline where the massive Pacific Plate grinds against other plates that form the Earth’s crust, creating a 40,000km-long zone prone to earthquake­s and other seismic upheaval.

Japan

The Shinmoedak­e volcano in southweste­rn Japan started erupting on Wednesday for the first time in about six years. An ash plume rose 1,700m from the crater on Thursday and ash fell on cities and towns in Miyazaki prefecture.

Japanese broadcaste­r TBS showed students wearing helmets and masks on their way to school at the foot of Shinmoedak­e. The Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency is warning that hot ash and gas clouds known as pyroclasti­c flows could reach two kilometres from the crater, and ash and volcanic rocks are a risk over a wider area depending on wind and elevation.

It raised the volcanic alert level from 2 to 3 on a scale of 5. Level 3 warns people to not approach the volcano.

Bali

More than 140,000 people fled Mount Agung on the Indonesian resort island of Bali after its alert status was raised to the highest level on Sept 22. Hundreds of tremors daily from the mountain indicate magma is rising inside it, prompting authoritie­s to warn a powerful eruption is possible.

The volcano spewed lava and deadly fast-moving clouds of boil- ing hot ash, gas and rocks when it last erupted in 1963, killing more than 1,100 people. A new eruption is likely to kill fewer people because officials have imposed a large no-go zone around the crater but it could paralyse tourism, which many Balinese rely on for their livelihood­s.

Indonesia has more than one tenth of the world’s active volcanos and another two are currently erupting. Sinabung in northern Sumatra is shooting plumes of ash high into the atmosphere nearly daily, and Dukono in the Maluku island chain is also periodical­ly erupting.

Vanuatu

The entire population of a Pacific island was evacuated in the space of a few days in late September and early October to escape the belching Manaro volcano.

The 11,000 residents of Ambae island were moved by every boat available to other islands in Vanuatu, a Pacific archipelag­o nation, where they’re living in schools, churches and tents.

Officials have since downgraded the volcano’s danger level but say the population must wait at least two more weeks to return.

The island’s water supply and crops have been affected by volcanic ash and acid rain but most villages were spared major damage.

Previous eruptions have lasted a month to six weeks.

 ?? — AP ?? Active volcanos: (From left) Shinmoedak­e volcano in southweste­rn Japan, Mount Agung in Bali and Manaro volcano on Vanuatu.
— AP Active volcanos: (From left) Shinmoedak­e volcano in southweste­rn Japan, Mount Agung in Bali and Manaro volcano on Vanuatu.

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