Manila Bulletin

After 25 years, Alert Level 1 raised over Mt. Pinatubo

- By JHON ALDRIN CASINAS

The Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology (Phivolcs) on Thursday, March 4, raised Alert Level 1 over Mount Pinatubo in Central Luzon after 25 years due to persistenc­e of seismic activities.

Phivolcs said the Pinatubo Volcano Network (PVN) has detected a total of 1,722 impercepti­ble earthquake­s beneath the Pinatubo edifice since January.

Due to the persistenc­e of seismic activity, Phivolcs said it has raised the status of Pinatubo Volcano from Alert Level 0 to Alert Level 1.

“This means that there is low-level unrest that may be related to tectonic processes beneath the volcano and that no imminent eruption is foreseen,” the agency said.

Phivolcs said the volcano, which is part of the Zambales Mountain Range located on the boundaries of Pampanga, Tarlac, Zambales and Bataan, has been on Alert Level 0 or “normal” status since January 1996.

State seismologi­sts recorded the first cluster of earthquake­s from January 20 to 26 along the Sacobia Lineament at depths of 15 to 28 kilometers and ranged between 1.0 and 2.5 in magnitudes.

“This has been succeeded by a more persistent cluster of earthquake­s occurring along a north-northwest-southsouth­east-trending structure 10 to 35 kilometers beneath the center of the edifice itself, with a few shallower earthquake­s occurring on both ends of the cluster,” Phivolcs said.

The said tremors ranged between magnitude 0.5 and 2.8, and are associated with “rockfractu­ring processes.”

Moreover, measuremen­ts conducted at Pinatubo Crater lake in February yielded a total carbon dioxide flux of 378 tonnes per day, which is still within the background range of 1,000 tonnes per day recorded in the past decade.

With this, Phivolcs advised those entering the Pinatubo Crater area to observe extreme caution or avoid it if possible.

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