Bangkok Post

Glowing red lava rolls down volcano slopes

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LEGAZPI: Glowing red lava rolled down the slopes of a Philippine volcano yesterday as authoritie­s maintained a warning of a possible hazardous eruption.

The lava was quietly flowing in some places but at times Mt Mayon was erupting like a fountain, the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology said. Lava had advanced up to 2km from the crater, and ash reached up to 2km and fell on nearby communitie­s.

Nearly 15,000 people have fled the danger zone within 6km to 7km of Mayon, and the institute strongly advised people not to re-enter the area.

Several small pyroclasti­c flows were generated by fragments in the lava streams and not by an explosion from the crater vent, as occurred with Mt Pinatubo, said Renato Solidum, who heads the volcano institute. Pyroclasti­c flows are superheate­d gas and volcanic debris that can race down slopes and incinerate everything in their path, and are feared in a major eruption.

“The pyroclasti­c flows, there were several, were not generated by an explosion from the crater with lava, molten rocks and steam, shooting up the volcano then rolling down,” Solidum said. “These were generated by lava fragments breaking off from the lava flow in the upper slopes.”

He also said Mayon has not seen enough volcanic earthquake­s of the type that would prompt scientists to raise the alert level to 4, which would indicate an explosive eruption may be imminent. Emergency response officials previously said they may have to undertake forced evacuation­s if the alert is raised to 4.

After steam explosions Saturday and lava rising in the crater on Sunday, the alert was raised to three on a scale of five, indicating a hazardous eruption is possible “within weeks or even days”.

Mayon lies in coconut-growing Albay province about 340km southeast of Manila. With its near-perfect cone, Mayon is popular with climbers and tourists but has erupted about 50 times in the last 500 years, sometimes violently.

In 2013, an ash eruption killed five climbers who had ventured near the summit despite warnings. Mayon’s first recorded eruption was in 1616 and the most destructiv­e in 1814 killed 1,200 people and buried the town of Cagsawa in volcanic mud.

The Philippine­s lies in the so-called “Ring of Fire”, a line of seismic faults surroundin­g the Pacific Ocean where earthquake­s and volcanic activity are common.

In 1991, Mt Pinatubo in the northern Philippine­s exploded in one of the biggest volcanic eruptions of the 20th century, killing about 800 people.

 ?? EPA ?? Villagers view lava flowing on the slope of Mt Mayon in the town of Daraga, Albay province, Philippine­s on Monday.
EPA Villagers view lava flowing on the slope of Mt Mayon in the town of Daraga, Albay province, Philippine­s on Monday.

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