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Montevideo, April 24th 2024 - 21:56 UTC

 

 

One of Mexico's most dangerous volcanoes belched ash and rock into the sky

Friday, January 10th 2020 - 09:15 UTC
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Authorities left the volcano's alert level at “Yellow Phase Two,” which instructs people to remain at least 12km from the crater and be prepared for evacuation Authorities left the volcano's alert level at “Yellow Phase Two,” which instructs people to remain at least 12km from the crater and be prepared for evacuation

Mexico's Popocatepetl volcano dramatically spewed a fiery cloud of ash and rock into the sky on Thursday, though it did not prompt authorities to raise their eruption alert level.

“Popo,” as the volcano is known, exploded early in the morning, belching “a moderate amount of ash and incandescent material” from its crater, the National Disaster Prevention Centre wrote on Twitter.

The explosion created a cloud of ash that reached 3,000m into the air.

The authorities, however, left the volcano's alert level at “Yellow Phase Two,” which instructs people to remain at least 12km from the crater and be prepared for a possible evacuation.

Popocatepetl, which means “smoking mountain” in the indigenous Nahuatl language, has not had a massive eruption in more than a millennium, but has shown increased activity in the past 26 years.

It is considered one of the world's most dangerous volcanoes, because some 25 million people live within a 100km radius.

Categories: Environment, Latin America.

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