Chile's Calbuco volcano erupted on Wednesday for the first time
in half a century, spewing a giant funnel of ash high into the sky near
the southern port city of Puerto Montt and triggering a red alert.
The
National Emergency Office ordered an evacuation for a 20-kilometer
(12-mile) radius around the crater and flights were disrupted.
Twitter
users and Chilean media posted pictures of a towering, mushroom-shaped
ash cloud rising from Calbuco's snowy peak in the Los Lagos region, some
1,400 kilometers south of the capital Santiago.
The 2,000-meter (6,500-foot) volcano had been inactive for 43 years.
It
is the second in southern Chile to have a substantial eruption since
March 3, when the Villarrica volcano emitted a brief but fiery burst of
ash and lava.
No lava was seen in the latest eruption,
but an ash cloud that could be seen from 20 kilometers away loomed over
the crater, prompting airlines to cancel flights to the affected area
No comments:
Post a Comment