
© world.time.com Black smoke billows from the Sistine Chapel chimney on Tuesday.
Cardinals set to hold next vote on Wednesday morning.Black smoke rose into the evening sky over the Vatican as a conclave of cardinals failed to select a new pope on its first vote Tuesday.
The conclave of 115 cardinals gathered in the sealed Sistine Chapel to cast ballots for who should lead the Roman Catholic Church. Who the cardinals voted for is unknown - but the black smoke means that no cardinal received two-thirds of the votes necessary.
Thousands gathered in St. Peter's Square to watch the results, but trickled quietly out of Vatican City shortly after the black smoke rose around 8 p.m. local time (3 p.m. ET).
The conclave will not vote again until Wednesday morning.
Brazilian tourist Bruno Smania was one of thousands who braved the damp weather in St. Peter's Square.
"It's a historic moment for me and for the world. I will be here all the time, waiting for the white smoke," Smania told the CBC's Karen Pauls.
Smania joined a group of Brazilians, some with their country's flags around their necks, hoping that Cardinal Odilo Pedro Scherer may become the church's leader.
Together, the group chanted "The pope from Brazil! The pope from Brazil!"
Tourists Cecilia Afione and Fernando Otero from Argentina missed the black smoke, but say they'll be back at the Vatican tomorrow.
"It's important to be here because the pope is the maximum authority," Afione said.
Comment: A new pope won't save the sinking ship