Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N. Guinea volcano belches ash plume

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CANBERRA, Australia — An eruption of Papua New Guinea’s tallest volcano that raised regional tsunami fears subsided Tuesday, but thick ash still billowed into the sky and coated roofs and palm trees nearby.

One of the South Pacific nation’s most active volcanoes, Mount Ulawun erupted on Monday, spewing ash as high as 50,000 feet.

Papua New Guinea’s Geohazards Management Division said while the eruption had been downgraded since Monday from the maximum alert level there were no signs that it was ending.

The eruption on the remote northeaste­rn island of New Britain attracted internatio­nal attention when Japanese authoritie­s announced they were assessing whether tsunami waves could reach the Izu and Ogasawara islands.

But several volcanolog­ists doubt that Ulawun will ever pose such a threat. Papua New Guinea’s division said the threat was “nil.”

Brad Scott, a volcanolog­ist with the New Zealand research institute GNS Science, said the “tsunami risk is incredibly minor,” because the volcano is far from the ocean.

But the volcano, which stands 7,657 feet above sea level, remained active, and the eruption could continue indefinite­ly, the division said.

The Papua New Guinea division reported the ash plume rising at least 16,000 feet on Tuesday before becoming lost in atmospheri­c cloud.

The small volcanic particles in ash plumes can be carried long distances by wind and can threaten aviation. A thick plume extended tens of miles to the northwest of Mount Ulawun on Tuesday.

The Volcanic Ash Advisory Center in Darwin in northern Australia, around 1,400 miles to the southwest of Ulawun, was among the first to detect the eruption through satellite technology.

Darwin is one of nine such centers around the globe that provide advice to the aviation industry about the location and movement of potentiall­y hazardous volcanic ash.

The nearest large town is Bialla, which is establishe­d among palm oil plantation­s on Ulawun’s slopes 29 miles to the southwest, the division said. Hargy Oil Palm Ltd., a company based in Bialla, did not immediatel­y respond to an email request for comment.

The division said heavy coatings of black ash were causing leaves to droop in palm oil plantation­s near the volcano and were accumulati­ng on roofs.

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