Major Volcanic Eruption feared in the Phillipines

TheLastOne36

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LEGAZPI, Philippines — The Philippines' most active volcano could have a huge eruption within days, officials warned Sunday after detecting a drastic surge in earthquakes and eerie rumbling sounds in surrounding foothills. Tens of thousands of villagers have been evacuated as a precaution.

Scientists raised the alert level for the Mayon volcano after 453 volcanic earthquakes were detected in a five-hour span Sunday, compared to just over 200 Saturday, said Renato Solidum, chief of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology.

The five-step warning system was raised to level four, meaning a hazardous eruption "is possible within days." Level five is when a major eruption has begun.

Army troops and police will intensify patrols to enforce a round-the-clock ban on villagers moving within a five-mile (eight-kilometer) danger zone around the 8,070-foot (2,460-meter) mountain, said Gov. Joey Salceda of Albay province, about 210 miles (340 kilometers) southeast of Manila.

More than 40,000 villagers have been moved to school buildings and other emergency shelters, but some have still been spotted checking on their farms in the prohibited zone. Salceda said about 5,000 more villagers were being evacuated away from the volcano.

The cone-shaped volcano began emitting red-hot lava and puffing columns of ash last week. It belched a plume of grayish ash half a mile (nearly a kilometer) into the sky Sunday, and lava has flowed about 2.8 miles (4.5 kilometers) down the mountainside, Salceda said.

A major eruption can trigger pyroclastic flows — superheated gas and volcanic debris that can race down the slopes at very high speed, vaporizing everything in their path. There can be more extensive ejections of ash, which can drift toward nearby townships.

In Mayon's major eruptions in recent years, such pyroclastic flows have reached up to four miles (six kilometers) down from the crater on the volcano's southern flank — a farming region where most residents have been evacuated, Salceda said.

Army checkpoints have been set up and patrols have been intensified to ensure residents will not sneak back to check on their homes and farms, as some have done in recent days, Salceda said.

"I have set a very high bar, which is zero casualty," Salceda told The Associated Press. "If there's a lull and you step back into the danger zone, you'll immediately be escorted out."

The evacuations were unfortunate, coming so close before Christmas, but authorities will find ways to bring holiday cheer to displaced villagers in emergency shelters, he said.

He said residents are used to playing a "cat and mouse" game with Mayon, a popular tourist attraction because of its near-perfect cone shape.

Residents who briefly returned to their homes within the danger zone Sunday morning to check on their belongings reported hearing eerie rumbling sounds. Some were seen by journalists tending to their farms within the prohibited zone near Guinobatan township.

In 1991, Mount Pinatubo exploded in the northern Philippines in one of the world's biggest volcanic eruptions of the 20th century, killing about 800 people.

Mayon last erupted in 2006, when about 30,000 people were moved. Another eruption in 1993 killed 79 people.

The first recorded eruption was in 1616 but the most destructive came in 1814, killing more than 1,200 people and burying a town in volcanic mud. The ruins of the church in Cagsawa have become an iconic tourist spot.

Great Christmas present, no?

Been a pretty crummy year for the Phillipines, could get worse it seems.
 
Some Images:

This is where it is happening:
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Lava continues to cascade down the slopes of Mayon volcano as viewed from Legazpi city in Albay province, 500 kilometers southeast of Manila, Philippines, Sunday evening Dec. 20, 2009. Government volcanollogists raised the five-level alert of Mayon volcano to 4 following increased activity of the country's most active volcano. Tens of thousands residents living around the slopes of Mayon are now housed in evacuation centers and most likely will spend Christmas away from their homes since the country's most active volcano became restive a week ago. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

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Lava cascades further down the slopes of Mayon volcano Sunday Dec. 20, 2009 in Legazpi city, Albay province, about 500 kilometers southeast of Manila, Philippines. Tens of thousands residents living around the slopes of Mayon are now housed in evacuation centers and most likely will spend Christmas away from their homes as the country's most active volcano became restive a week ago.
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Evacuees who were forced to evacuate from the continued restiveness of Mayon volcano, cook their meals at their temporary shelter at a public school in Bacacay township, Albay province, about 500 kilometers southeast of Manila, Philippines Sunday Dec. 20, 2009. Tens of thousands residents living around the slopes of Mayon are now housed in evacuation centers and most likely will spend Christmas away from their homes since the country's most active volcano became restive a week ago.

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A farmer prepares to plant rice on a farm near the restive Mayon volcano in Guinobatan township, Albay province, 500 kilometers southeast of Manila, Philippines, Sunday, Dec. 20, 2009. Residents are now prevented from venturing into the 8-kilometer-danger zone after government volcanollogists raised the five-level alert of Mayon volcano to 4 following increasing activity Sunday.

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Farmers plant rice on a farm near the restive Mayon volcano in Guinobatan township, Albay province, 500 kilometers southeast of Manila, Philippines, Sunday, Dec. 20, 2009. Residents are now prevented from venturing into the 8-kilometer-danger zone after government volcanollogists raised the five-level alert of Mayon volcano to 4 following increasing activity Sunday.
 
Looks like they may have done a good job moving the people. Bad situation. I'd be scared to live anywhere near a volcano.
 
People who live near volcanoes or on fault lines are nuts. I was temporarily nuts for a while myself, but riding a couch during the Loma Prietta earthquake convinced me otherwise.
 
People who live near volcanoes or on fault lines are nuts. I was temporarily nuts for a while myself, but riding a couch during the Loma Prietta earthquake convinced me otherwise.

Or are very smart.

Richer Soil = Better more productive farming = ? = Profit.
 
People who live near volcanoes or on fault lines are nuts. I was temporarily nuts for a while myself, but riding a couch during the Loma Prietta earthquake convinced me otherwise.

Because everyone in the world has the option of moving.

Never mind the fact that anyone in the Philippines is living in a pretty active tectonic zone -- they'd need to emigrate to live somewhere geologically stable, a difficult prospect at best. Also, arguably the risk from tectonics is minimal, even when living in the so-called "Ring of Fire", compared to any number of other hazards.
 
Sucks a ton for the people there, but volcano pics are awesome :D
 
People who live near volcanoes or on fault lines are nuts. I was temporarily nuts for a while myself, but riding a couch during the Loma Prietta earthquake convinced me otherwise.

Volcanic soil is generally very fertile for growing crops. The occasional eruption is definitely a downside, but on the other hand you're less susceptible to famine.
 
It's their punishment for being catholic.
 
People who live near volcanoes or on fault lines are nuts. I was temporarily nuts for a while myself, but riding a couch during the Loma Prietta earthquake convinced me otherwise.


It's hard to find a place that's not threatened by volcanos, earthquake faults, hurricanes [typhoons, cyclones] or tornados.

Maybe the middle of the Sahara or perhaps in the center of Greenland.
 
the center of europe is nice too.


Those Alpie-type mountains are a little scary. Weren't they caused by earthquakes?

BTW: Just to prove how crazy I am, here's a pic of the Camigan volcano as seen from the house I'm building in the Philippines. :)



If it ever blows, I'm far enough away that I won't be harmed by the eruption. But if it sets off a tsunami, I am in serious trouble.
 
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