Thursday, April 23, 2015

Chile’s Calbuco Volcano Erupts Second Time, Red Alert in Force

Smoke and ash rise from the Calbuco volcano as seen from the city of Puerto Montt, April 22, 2015.
Chile’s Calbuco Volcano erupted for a second time, after being inactive for 40 years.
MOSCOW (Sputnik) Southern Chile’s Calbuco Volcano erupted for a second time in a day, after being inactive for 40 years, the state’s national geological service reported. “The second eruption of Calbuco Volcano was recorded, red alert level remains in force,” Chile's National Geology and Mining Service (SERNAGEOMIN) wrote on Twitter on Wednesday.

The first eruption of the volcano was reported by SERNAGEOMIN earlier in the day. The agency's National Volcanic Monitoring Network issued a red alert in response to the eruption.

The volcano sent a plume of ash and smoke several miles high into the sky on Wednesday afternoon. About 4,000 people were evacuated from the area within a 20-kilometer (12-mile) radius of Calbuco crater due to the eruption, according to local media.
Calbuco is located on the territory of Llanquihue National Reserve in the Los Lagos Region. Its last major eruption occurred in 1961. Since 1837, the volcano has had a total of at least 10 eruptions. Calbuco is considered the third most hazardous volcano among Chile's 90 active volcanoes, according to SERNAGEOMIN.

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