One dead in volcanic eruption in Guatemala

Guatemala City/Quito, May 29 (DPA) At least one reporter was killed in a volcanic eruption in the Central American state of Guatemala overnight Friday, officials reported.

The authorities did not immediately confirm two further deaths, which had been reported earlier.

Several people were injured in the eruption of the Pacaya volcano, and Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom declared a state of emergency in the area, affecting the provinces of Guatemala and Esquintla.

Guatemala City, which is home to about 3 million people, also saw effects of the eruption. Ash and sand fell on the city, causing traffic chaos, and the airport was temporarily closed, until the sand could be removed from the runways. Lessons were suspended at schools and universities.

Television reporter Anibal Archila had travelled to the volcano with his team, in order to report on the eruption. He was hit and killed by falling debris.

In San Jose Calderas, San Francisco and other villages in the area, debris damaged the roofs of precarious houses. People ran out of their homes in panic, the daily La Prensa reported. The villages of El Rodeo and El Patrocinio, around five km away from the volcano, were also impacted by the eruption.

The country’s seismological institute Insivumeh said that the volcano shot ash more than 1,500 metres into the atmosphere. Around 1,800 people were evacuated to safety from the endangered region after the Pacaya volcano eruption.

The Pacaya, 2,500 metres high, is one of the most active volcanoes in Central America. It lies 26 km south of Guatemala City.

Also Friday, Ecuador’s Geophysical Institute reported a volcanic eruption, which it described as ‘large’ on the Tungurahua, 130 km from Quito.

The eruption of the Tungurahua, which stands 5,010 metres high, led to the evacuation of the nearby villages of Cusua and Juive Grande. Experts said the volcano let off a 7,000-metre-tall column of ash along with pyroclastic flow.

The Tungarahua’s eruptive process started in 1999, although the level of alert has varied since then. Four years ago, a strong eruption caused damage to roads and agriculture.

Sudden temperature drop, not comet strike, behind extinction of dinos

Washington, April 24 (ANI): A sudden drop in global temperatures, and not a comet strike, led to the mass extinction of dinosaurs, according to a new research.

Scientists are now advising the constant monitoring of the present warning signs like influxes of fresh water into the North Atlantic, and slowdowns of the Atlantic Gulf Stream, lest the temperature shift may occur again.

While some theories blame the dinosaurs” extinction on an asteroid hit or volcano eruption, new research appearing in Nature Geoscience and the journal Geology, says climate was responsible.

According to the study, the greenhouse climate of the Cretaceous period experienced a sudden drop in world temperatures.

“We believe dinosaurs were most likely to be cold-blooded creatures and would have needed the warmth to keep them alive. If they were unable to migrate south, they could have been wiped out,” Discovery News quoted Gregory Price of the University of Plymouth, as telling the Daily Mail.

“Climate change is now very much on the agenda in trying to determine how the dinosaurs became extinct,” he added.

Scientists believe the first big Cretaceous temperature drop took place 137 million years ago and caused ocean temperatures to fall as low as 4 degrees centigrade.

Although it is difficult to imagine such a dramatic ocean cooling now, given global warming, climate change is said to cause extreme shifts of all kinds, from harsher than normal storms to this type of major ocean temperature shift.

Price and his team examined fossils for dinosaurs that once lived at Svalbard in the Arctic Circle.

This region during the Cretaceous was characterized by warm, shallow seas and swamps before the ocean changes took place.

Price said: “At certain times in the geological past, the world has been dominated by greenhouse conditions with elevated CO2 levels and warm Polar Regions, and hence, these are seen as analogues of future global climate.

“But this research suggests that for short periods of time, the Earth plunged back to colder temperatures, which not only poses interesting questions in terms of how the dinosaurs might have coped, but also over the nature of climate change itself.”

Price and his team arrived at their conclusions after examining the Svalbard dinosaur fossils and those for giant marine reptiles like pliosaurs and icthyosaurs.

Price said: “The flourishing of the dinosaurs and a range of other data indicates that the Cretaceous period was considerably warmer and boasted a high degree of CO2 in the atmosphere.

“But over a period of a few hundred or a few thousand years, ocean temperatures fell from an average of 13 degrees centigrade to between eight and four degrees.

“Although a short episode of cool polar conditions is potentially at odds with a high CO2 world, our data demonstrates the variability of climate over long timescales.” (ANI)

Active Icelandic volcano may cause bigger eruption

A volcano spouting lava in the south of Iceland showed signs of increased activity on Monday, leading scientists to warn it could trigger a far more powerful eruption at a nearby geological hotspot.

The eruption near the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, which began shortly before midnight on Saturday, sent steam 4 kilometres up in the air and is gradually intensifying, geophysicist Steinunn Jakobsdottir told a local newspaper.

Another scientist said he was concerned the activity could cause an eruption at Mount Katla, an “enormously powerful” volcano lying under a glacier nearby.

“Eyjafjallajokull hardly makes a move without Mount Katla wanting to get in on the action,” said Pall Einarsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland. “It is therefore of utmost importance to watch events carefully.”

An eruption at Mount Katla could melt huge amounts of ice and cause massive floods, potentially affecting a town of 300 people nearby, Einarsson added. Three previous eruptions at Eyjafjallajokull have triggered eruptions at Mount Katla.

On Sunday, rescue teams evacuated 500 people from the rural area around the volcano and police declared a local state of emergency. International flights were diverted because of the risk of interference from ash clouds.

No injuries or damage to property were reported.

Iceland sits on a volcanic hotspot in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and has relatively frequent eruptions, though most occur in sparsely populated areas and pose little danger to people or property. The last eruption i Iceland took place in 2004.

(Reporting by Omar Valdimarsson, editing by Tim Pearce)

Redoubt Volcano in Alaska roars into activity, more eruptions to follow

Washington, March 24 (ANI): Redoubt Volcano in Alaska, has roared into activity overnight with a series of eruptions that blew ash as high as 9.5 miles (15 kilometers) into the sky, with scientists saying that more such explosions are due.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the Redoubt Volcano eruption has already sparked earthquake swarms and mudflows, and more are expected-along with perhaps a new lava dome.

The eruption could continue for days, weeks, or possibly months, said Tina Neal, a volcanologist at the Alaska Volcano Observatory in Anchorage, which monitors the 10,200-foot (3,100-meter) volcano. ocated about 100 miles (160 kilometers) southwest of Anchorage, Redoubt Volcano sent ash drifting north of the city.

Anchorage itself seems to have been spared so far, thanks to the current wind pattern.

Small Alaska towns as far as 150 miles (240 kilometers) north of Anchorage have seen abrasive volcanic dust, and area airplanes have been grounded, according to Neal.

“We had at least five (eruptions) that lasted ten to twenty minutes each,” she said.

Nobody knows what the Alaska volcano will do next, but Redoubt continues to be very restless, producing swarms of small earthquakes, Neal said.

“If the eruption proceeds according to form, the next step might be the formation of a lava dome,” she added.

When Redoubt Volcano last erupted, in 1989-90, a series of such domes formed, each collapsing as it grew too large to support itself.

“But, we have no evidence of a lava dome yet,” Neal said.

There is little chance that the volcano might produce a devastating explosion like Washington State’s 1980 Mount St. Helens eruption, she added.

More likely is that hot ash falling on snow will produce mudflows.

Mud, in fact, has already been seen at the mouth of the Drift River, which drains the north side of the glacier-capped mountain into Cook Inlet.hatever happens, the eruptions will be learning experiences, thanks to the volcano observatory’s constant monitoring.

“When the dust settles, literally, we will have a lot of data to pore through,” Neal said. (ANI)