Lava from Spanish island volcano rolls slowly toward the sea

DANIEL ROCA and BARRY HATTONAssociated Press

In this photo made available by Ume (Unidad Militar de Emergencias), Military Emergency Unit personal take gas reading measurements near a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain, in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. Lava flowing from an erupting volcano on the Spanish island of La Palma has picked up pace on its way to the sea. Officials say it is now within about 800 meters (875 yards) of the shoreline. When the molten rock eventually meets the sea water it could trigger explosions and toxic gas. (Luismi Ortiz/UME via AP)
1of15In this photo made available by Ume (Unidad Militar de Emergencias), Military Emergency Unit personal take gas reading measurements near a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain, in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. Lava flowing from an erupting volcano on the Spanish island of La Palma has picked up pace on its way to the sea. Officials say it is now within about 800 meters (875 yards) of the shoreline. When the molten rock eventually meets the sea water it could trigger explosions and toxic gas. (Luismi Ortiz/UME via AP)Luismi Ortiz/AP
Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.
2of15Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.Saul Santos/AP
3of15
Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.
4of15Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.Saul Santos/AP
Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.
5of15Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.Saul Santos/AP
6of15
In this Saturday, Sept. 25, 2021 satellite photo from Planet Labs Inc. lava and ash from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain can be seen. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters. (Planet Labs Inc. via AP)
7of15In this Saturday, Sept. 25, 2021 satellite photo from Planet Labs Inc. lava and ash from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain can be seen. A Sp anish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters. (Planet Labs Inc. via AP)Planet Labs Inc./AP
Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain on Monday Sept. 27, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.
8of15Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain on Monday Sept. 27, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.Daniel ROca/AP
9of15
Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.
10of15Lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.Saul Santos/AP
A woman takes a selfie as lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain on Monday Sept. 27, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.
11of15A woman takes a selfie as lava flows from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain on Monday Sept. 27, 2021. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters.Daniel Roca/AP
12of15
In this Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021 satellite photo from Planet Labs Inc. lava and ash from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain can be seen. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters. (Planet Labs Inc. via AP)
13of15In this Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021 satellite photo from Planet Labs Inc. lava and ash from a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain can be seen. A Spanish island volcano that has buried more than 500 buildings and displaced over 6,000 people since last week lessened its activity on Monday, although scientists warned that it was too early to declare the eruption phase finished and authorities ordered residents to stay indoors to avoid the unhealthy fumes from lava meeting sea waters. (Planet Labs Inc. via AP)Planet Labs Inc./AP
In this photo made available by Ume (Unidad Militar de Emergencias), Military Emergency Unit personal take gas reading measurements near a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain, in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. Lava flowing from an erupting volcano on the Spanish island of La Palma has picked up pace on its way to the sea. Officials say it is now within about 800 meters (875 yards) of the shoreline. When the molten rock eventually meets the sea water it could trigger explosions and toxic gas. (Luismi Ortiz/UME via AP)
14of15In this photo made available by Ume (Unidad Militar de Emergencias), Military Emergency Unit personal take gas reading measurements near a volcano on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain, in the early hours of Tuesday Sept. 28, 2021. Lava flowing from an erupting volcano on the Spanish island of La Palma has picked up pace on its way to the sea. Officials say it is now within about 800 meters (875 yards) of the shoreline. When the molten rock eventually meets the sea water it could trigger explosions and toxic gas. (Luismi Ortiz/UME via AP)Luismi Ortiz/AP
15of15

LOS LLANOS DE ARIDANE, Canary Islands (AP) — Lava flowing from a volcano in Spain’s Canary Islands picked up its pace on its way to the sea Tuesday, but scientists said it was impossible to estimate when the black-and-red stream of molten rock would reach the shore.

Authorities said the lava had moved on the island of La Palma to within 800 meters (875 yards) of the Atlantic Ocean as of Tuesday morning, nine days after the volcano’s eruption. When it eventually meets sea water, the lava could trigger explosions and the release of toxic gas.

By the afternoon, officials said various factors dictated the unpredictable speed of the lava flow, including its departure from a path over an earlier flow that had hardened. The river of cooled lava had helped the moving flow slide along.

“The lava cools down as time passes and it meets uneven ground, which slows it down,” said Miguel Ángel Morcuende, technical director of the Canary Islands emergency volcano response department. “And if it comes off the highway it was going along, that slows it even more because it spreads out wider.”

A small hill and a built-up area also stood in the lava’s way, and the shore area is flatter than the hills the lava has been flowing down.

For days, officials have nervously awaited the time when lava from the Sept. 19 eruption reaches the Atlantic, but the volcano has been erratic. After calming down on Monday, the volcano became more explosive again overnight.

Authorities said they don’t expect the slow-moving lava to create a large disruption on the coast. But Eugenio Fraile, a researcher at the Spanish Oceanography Institute, told Cadena Ser radio that only scientists wearing protective gear will be inside a security perimeter when the flow hits the ocean.

The National Geographic Institute detected six earthquakes Tuesday in the area of the eruption, with the strongest measured at magnitude 3.3.

La Palma, home to about 85,000 people, is part of the volcanic Canary Islands, an archipelago off northwest Africa. The island is roughly 35 kilometers (22 miles) long and 20 kilometers (12 miles) wide at its broadest point.

Lava from the eruption has devoured everything in its path, destroying 589 buildings and 21 kilometers (13 miles) of roads on La Palma. The lava now covers 258 hectares (637 acres), mostly farmland, according to a European Union satellite monitoring agency.

No deaths or serious injuries have been reported, thanks to the prompt evacuations of over 6,000 people.

But local people have lost their homes and their livelihoods at the same time. Farming is one of the island’s economic mainstays, along with tourism, and the lava and ash has ruined crops and irrigation systems, endangered aviation and poses a significant health risk to those nearby.

No flights went in or out of La Palma’s airport for a fourth straight day because of a huge ash cloud. Volcanic ash is hazardous for aircraft engines.

The Spanish government announced after its weekly Cabinet meeting Tuesday it’s providing an immediate grant of 10.5 million euros ($12.3 million) to buy 107 properties to rehouse local people and also provide them with income aid.

More aid, including for the rebuilding of public infrastructure, will be sent once the current emergency is over, government spokeswoman Isabel Rodríguez said.

The volcano has so far spewed out more than 46 million cubic meters (1.6 billion cubic feet) of molten rock, according to the Canary Island Volcanology Institute.

___

Hatton reported from Lisbon, Portugal.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
שומרי הסף של המגוון הביולוגי באיי גלאפגוס thumbnail

שומרי הסף של המגוון הביולוגי באיי גלאפגוס

הידען > שומרי הסף של המגוון הביולוגי באיי גלאפגוס משלחת מטעם חוקרי הפקולטה למדעי החיים, בשיתוף מוזיאון הטבע ע"ש שטיינהרדט, טסו לקצה השני של העולם והשתתפו בכנס לשימור המגוון הביולוגי באיי גלאפגוס איי גלפאגוס. צילום: פרופ' נועה שנקר, אוניברסיטת תל אביבאם משרת החלומות שלכם כוללת טיסות ליעדים אקזוטיים – כדאי לשקול קריירת מחקר בזואולוגיה. פרופ'…
Read More
Nintendo Switch OLED Preview: First Impressions thumbnail

Nintendo Switch OLED Preview: First Impressions

When Nintendo announced the Nintendo Switch (OLED Model), the upcoming revised version of Nintendo’s hybrid handheld console, fans were disappointed. Months of rumors and reporting had planted the idea that Nintendo’s console refresh would support 4K gameplay in docked mode and other hardware upgrades that improve performance. The new Switch would be a minor step…
Read More
When to See the Wolf Moon in January thumbnail

When to See the Wolf Moon in January

Image: Denis Andricic (Shutterstock)January’s full moon, sometimes called the Wolf Moon, will rise on the northeastern horizon on Monday, Jan. 17 at 6:51 pm, East Coast time. The moon will look full for three nights, beginning on Sunday and ending on Wednesday.If you want to know the exact moonrise and moonset times where you are,…
Read More
How big is Jupiter? thumbnail

How big is Jupiter?

Home References Science & Astronomy (Image credit: Getty Images) It is the largest planet in the solar system, but just how big is Jupiter? The gas giant is approximately 318 times as massive as Earth, according to planetary scientist Alan Boss. If the mass of all of the other planets in the solar system were…
Read More
JAL、21年4-12月期赤字もキャッシュバーン解消 10-12月期は7四半期ぶり黒字 thumbnail

JAL、21年4-12月期赤字もキャッシュバーン解消 10-12月期は7四半期ぶり黒字

 日本航空(JAL/JL、9201)が2月2日に発表した2021年4-12月期(22年3月期第3四半期累計)連結決算(IFRS)は、本業のもうけを示すEBIT(利払い・税引き前損益)が1833億2800万円の赤字(前年同期は2941億7900万円の赤字)だったものの、EBITに減価償却費を加えたEBITDA(利払い・税引き・償却前損益)は10-12月期(第3四半期単独)に黒字化を達成し、キャッシュバーン(現金流出)を解消した。通期予想は据え置いた。 —記事の概要— ・21年4-12月期 ・22年3月期予想 *ANAHD決算はこちら。 21年4-12月期 21年4-12月期は1283億円の最終赤字となったJAL=PHOTO: Tadayuki YOSHIKAWA/Aviation Wire  4-12月期の売上高にあたる「売上収益」は前年同期比39.8%増の4984億8000万円、最終損益は1283億2200万円の赤字(同2127億2200万円の赤字)となり、損失を前年同期比で844億円改善した。  国内線旅客が回復したことで、第3四半期単独(10-12月期)ではEBITDAが118億円の黒字、営業キャッシュフローは91億円のキャッシュインフローになり、いずれも四半期では2020年3月期第4四半期以来7四半期ぶりとなった。  旅客収入は国際線が484億円(前年同期比約2.6倍、19年同期比12.1%減)、国内線は1744億円(27.4%増、40.8%減)。貨物郵便収入は1610億円(77.1%増、約2.3倍)だった。  オンラインで会見を開いた財務・経理本部長の菊山英樹専務は、国内線旅客の需要動向について「年末年始は これより先は会員の方のみご覧いただけます。 無料会員は、有料記事を月あたり3記事まで無料でご覧いただけます。有料会員は、すべての有料記事をご覧いただけます。 会員の方はログインしてご覧ください。ご登録のない方は、無料会員登録すると続きをお読みいただけます。 無料会員として登録後、有料会員登録も希望する方は、会員用ページよりログイン後、有料会員登録をお願い致します。 * 会員には、無料個人会員および有料個人会員、有料法人会員の3種類ございます。  これらの会員になるには、最初に無料会員としての登録が必要です。 購読料はこちらをご覧ください。 * 有料会員と無料会員、非会員の違いは下記の通りです。・有料会員:会員限定記事を含む全記事を閲覧可能・無料会員:会員限定記事は月3本まで閲覧可能・非会員:会員限定記事以外を閲覧可能 * 法人会員登録は、こちらからお問い合わせください。* 法人の会員登録は有料のみです。
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share