Volcanoes
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Attention

La Palma volcano in the Canary Islands hit by hundreds of earthquakes in 15 hours

La Palma was hit by 44 earthquakes over a magnitude 2.1 from Friday evening
La Palma was hit by 44 earthquakes over a magnitude 2.1 from Friday evening
A shock map has been released by Spanish authorities showing where the tremors hit in the area surrounding the deadly Cumbre Vieja.

There were 44 earthquakes recorded up to 2.1 magnitude hit between Friday at 1.52pm and Saturday to 4.17am.

But experts believe the total number, including ones too small to be located, within the seismic storm was 352.

The quakes follow another seismic storm the weekend before. which saw around 50 tremors in three days, between 1.5 and 2.7 on the Richter Scale.

Attention

Shinmoedake volcano in Japan erupts again, sends plume 2,300 meters into the air

A huge plume of smoke emerges from Mount Shinmoedake in southern Kyushu on Oct. 14.
A huge plume of smoke emerges from Mount Shinmoedake in southern Kyushu on Oct. 14.
Kyushu's Mount Shinmoedake is still rumbling with volcanic activity three days after it blew its top for the first time in six years on Oct. 11.

The Japan Meteorological Agency said an eruption that started at 8:23 a.m. on Oct. 14 sent a plume of smoke 2,300 meters into the air.

The 1,421-meter-high mountain straddles the border of Miyazaki and Kagoshima prefectures in southern Kyushu. The JMA raised the volcano's activity alert to Level 3, warning people to stay away from the mountain. The alert had been at Level 2, which meant climbers should stay away from the crater.

Around 4 p.m. on Oct. 13, the JMA announced that consecutive eruptions appeared to have stopped as the fluctuation of volcanic tremors had weakened.

But the agency continued to urge caution as it believed volcanic activity was continuing.

Attention

Yellowstone's supervolcano: Threat is greater than previously thought

supervolcano
© The Sun/GettyYellowstone supervolcano caldera
Scientists from the US Geological Survey who breezily informed the public that there's "nothing to worry about" with regards to the Yellowstone caldera, a supervolcano that should it erupt could cause potentially hundreds of thousands of deaths, should be eating their words.

Since about mid-July, the earth beneath the volcano has been shifting in a sign that magma could be rushing into the caldera's main chamber. Since then, there have been roughly 2,500 small-scale earthquakes recorded near the volcano, the largest stretch on record. Previous estimates had assumed that the process that led to the eruption took millenniums to occur.

The same estimates that USGS based their warning on.

Caldera chart
© Unknown
As the New York Times explains, the Yellowstone caldera is a behemoth far more powerful than your average volcano. It has the ability to expel more than 1,000 cubic kilometers of rock and ash at once, 2,500 times more material than erupted from Mount St. Helens in 1980, which killed 57 people. That could blanket most of the United States in a thick layer of ash and even plunge the Earth into a volcanic winter.

As the Times points out, scientists expect a supervolcano eruption to scar the planet once every 100,000 years.

To reach their conclusion, the team of scientists spent weeks at Yellowstone's Lava Creek Tuff - a fossilized ash deposit from the volcano's last supereruption, where they gathered samples and analyzed the volcanic leftovers. The analysis allowed the scientists to pin down changes in the lava flow before the last eruption. The crystalline structures of the rocks recorded changes in temperature, pressure and water content beneath the volcano just like tree rings do.

Attention

Scientists on alert as underwater volcano Tagoro in the Canary Islands bursts into life

The underwater volcano near El Hierro is simmering
The underwater volcano near El Hierro is simmering
On October 10, 2011, the Tagoro underwater volcano near to the island of El Hierro, the smallest of the isles in the Canaries, began bursting into life.

The volcano beneath the surface began spewing ash and lava which bubbled to the top - and although that eruption was not too strong, scientists are monitoring the volcano as they are wary it could burst into life with more power.

A project known as Vulcano-II-1017 from the Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness and Feder, in conjunction with the Spanish Institute of Oceanography, the University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, the University of La Laguna and the Museum of Nature and Man of Tenerife, will monitor the situation to see if the volcano poses any danger.

The reason experts are keeping a close eye on it is because the volcano is still rumbling six years after its eruption near to the tourist hotspot.

Comment: See also this recent report from the 10th of October concerning the region: 40 earthquake tremors in 48 hours hit La Palma, Canary Islands


Attention

Shinmoedake volcano in Japan erupts for first time in six years

Aerial footage shows the increasingly active volcano Mount Shinmoe smoking on Wednesday afternoon.
© KYODOAerial footage shows the increasingly active volcano Mount Shinmoe smoking on Wednesday afternoon.
Mount Shinmoe in the Kirishima mountain range bordering Kagoshima and Miyazaki prefectures erupted early Wednesday, marking its first such activity in about six years.

The Meteorological Agency raised the warning level for a volcanic eruption to Level 3, restricting entry to the mountain. It warned the volcano might grow more active, as swelling of the mountain was observed.

Volcanic tremors had been intensifying in the area since late September, prompting the agency to raise the warning level to Level 2 on Oct. 5 to restrict entry to areas near the mouth of the volcano. Level 5, the highest alert, urges people to evacuate.

The agency said Wednesday's eruption occurred at around 5:34 a.m., with the plume rising about 300 meters above the crater.

The government set up a liaison unit at the prime minister's office to gather information.


Attention

Alert level raised due to increased seismic activity at Lewotolo volcano, Indonesia

Recent seismic activity at Lewotolo volcano
© PVMBGRecent seismic activity at Lewotolo volcano
The alert level of the volcano was raised yesterday from from Level I (Normal) to Level II (Alert), the Indonesian volcano monitoring agency PVMBG reported.

Over the past weeks, degassing and seismic activity have increased significantly, suggesting a greater likelihood of a new eruption, most likely in the form of sudden explosions from the summit crater.

During the last week of September, a steam plume of varying intensity has been observed rising up to 500 m from the crater, and volcanic earthquakes detected under the volcano have increased from averages of a few per day to several tens per day.

An exclusion zone of 2 km radius around the crater is recommended.

Attention

Multiple explosions at Mexico's Popocatépetl volcano raises concern

Popocatepetl volcano
© Oswaldo Cantero / Reuters / ReutersSmoke rises from the Popocatepetl as it spews incandescent volcanic material on the outskirts of Puebla, Mexico September 27, 2017.
Mexico City is still recovering from the 7.1 magnitude earthquake that killed over 200 people and devastated the capital, but many fear the increase in seismic activity may trigger the nearby volcano Popocatépetl.

A series of explosions and minor eruptions took place this week, putting citizens of the neighboring city of Puebla on alert as ash rained down over the city, with the seismic activity causing river waters to rise for a period.

CENAPRED, the official disaster monitoring agency in Mexico, reports that between October 5 and 6, a total of four major explosions were registered at the volcano.

The agency also recorded a minor earthquake of 3.0 magnitude on October 5.


Attention

Shinmoedake volcano eruption warning at Level 2 as tremors increase in Japan

Shinmoedake peak in the Kirishima mountain range on the border of Kagoshima and Miyazaki prefectures is seen in a 2012 file photo.
© KyodoShinmoedake peak in the Kirishima mountain range on the border of Kagoshima and Miyazaki prefectures is seen in a 2012 file photo.
The Meteorological Agency has raised the warning level by one notch against a volcanic eruption for Shinmoedake peak, located in the Kirishima mountain range bordering between Kagoshima and Miyazaki prefectures.

The agency took the step late Thursday night, saying it issued a Level 2 warning for Shinmoedake in light of a recent series of small volcanic tremors observed in the area.

A Level 2 warning restricts entry to areas near the mouth of the volcano, while a Level 1 warning only tells the public of its existence. Level 5, the highest alert, urges people to evacuate.

According to the agency, 12 tremors were observed on Shinmoedake on Sept. 23, and 39 on Oct. 4. The number continues to rise.

Arrow Up

Guatemala's Fuego volcano sends ash five kilometres into the sky after 12 eruptions in one hour

Fuego volcano erupts
© GettyIt has been described as on of “the largest recorded eruptions” in the volcano's history


RESIDENTS of a nearby volcano in Guatemala have been left terrified after it exploded ash 5,000 metres into the air during 12 small eruptions in the space of an hour.


The Fuego Volcano in south Guatemala burst into life on Wednesday plumes of ash blew into the sky in what has been described as on of "the largest recorded eruptions" in the volcano's history.

The volcano, known locally as Volcan de Fuego, which translates as 'Volcano of Fire', is an extremely active volcano, and this is the seventh time this year that it has erupted.

Guatemala's National Institute of Seismology, Volcanology, Meteorology and Hydrology (Insivumeh) stated that ash has been spread 20 kilometres in east and northeast directions.

Authorities have also warned that ash could spread all the way to Guatemala City, the capital of Guatemala, some 50 kilometres northwards of the volcano.


Comment: The Pacific Ring of Fire is exploding right now: 32 volcanoes erupting, 33 showing minor activity, and several strong earthquakes.

Ring of fire activity October 2017
© GoogleCurrent erupting volcanoes (red), current volcanoes showing warning or minor activity (orange). and current volcanoes showing unrest (yellow).



Attention

Unusual swarm of 600 earthquakes hit Llaima volcano, Chile

Llaima volcano, Chile
© WikipediaThe snowy cone of Llaima volcano, Chile.
An unusual swarm of more than 600 earthquakes - never seen in years - has struck below Llaima volcano in Chile reports rio bueno noticias.

According to Sernageomin (Chilean National Geology and Mining Service) reported through Ovdas (Volcanological Observatory of the South Andes), a series of LP-type low frequency tremors, commonly associated with the dynamics of fluids inside the volcanic system, have been recorded at the volcano since Sunday 1 October.

Ovdas reported that despite the increase in seismic activity at the volcano, the accumulated energy is still considered low and the alert level remains at green. Llaima Volcano is one of the largest and most active volcanoes in Chile.

Volcanic and seismic activity appears to be increasing in the Pacific Ring of Fire.

Comment: See also: Pay attention to the Pacific Ring of Fire as major geo events trigger concern