Las Vegas Review-Journal

Volcanic ash and lava flows threatened a Spanish island.

Officials warn of lava, earthquake­s, toxic gas

- By Aritz Parra and Renata Brito

EL PASO, Canary Islands — As a new volcanic vent blew open and unstoppabl­e rivers of molten rock flowed toward the sea, authoritie­s on a Spanish island warned Tuesday that more dangers lie ahead for residents, including earthquake­s, lava flows, toxic gases, volcanic ash and acid rain.

Several small earthquake­s shook the island of La Palma in the Atlantic Ocean off northwest Africa on Tuesday, keeping nerves on edge after a volcanic eruption Sunday. The island, with a population of 85,000, is part of the Canary Islands archipelag­o, a key tourist destinatio­n for Europeans.

Authoritie­s said the new fissure demonstrat­ed that the area was unstable and unsafe, and they kept people at least 1¼ miles away.

The rivers of lava, nearly 20 feet high, rolled down hillsides, burning and crushing everything in their path, as they closed in on the island’s more densely populated coast. One was bearing down on Todoque, where more than 1,000 people live, and where emergency services were preparing evacuation­s.

The eruption had destroyed around 190 houses and forced the evacuation of 6,000 people.

“The truth is that it’s a tragedy to see people losing their properties,” municipal worker Fernando Díaz said in El Paso.

The lava’s advance has slowed to about 400 feet an hour, according to the head of the Canary Island Volcanic Emergency Plan, Miguel Ángel Morcuende, and wasn’t expected to reach the Atlantic Ocean before Wednesday.

Canary Islands government chief Ángel Víctor Torres said “when (the lava) reaches the sea, it will be a critical moment.”

The meeting of the lava, with a temperatur­e exceeding 1,800 degrees, and a body of water could cause explosions and produce clouds of toxic gas. Torres asked locals to remember the island’s last eruption in 1971, when one person died after inhaling the gas emitted as lava met the water.

A change in wind direction blew the ashes from the volcano across a vast area on the western side of the island, with the black particles blanketing everything. Volcanic ash is an irritant for the eyes and lungs.

The volcano has also been spewing out 8,000 to 10,500 tons of sulfur dioxide — which also affects the lungs — every day, the Volcanolog­y Institute said.

Adding to the dangers, the emergence of new cracks in the earth spewing lava cannot be ruled out, said Nemesio Pérez, head of the Canary Islands Volcanolog­y Institute, who noted there is “important superficia­l seismic activity in the area.”

The new fissure that appeared Monday night is 3,000 feet north of the Cumbre Vieja ridge, where the volcano erupted Sunday after a week of thousands of small earthquake­s. That earthquake swarm warned authoritie­s that an eruption was likely and allowed many people to be evacuated, preventing casualties.

 ?? Emilio Morenatti The Associated Press ?? A river of lava destroys houses Tuesday on La Palma, a Spanish island that is home to 85,000 residents, in the Canaries.
Emilio Morenatti The Associated Press A river of lava destroys houses Tuesday on La Palma, a Spanish island that is home to 85,000 residents, in the Canaries.

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