
Sicily's Mount Etna eruption sends huge plumes of ash into air: See video
Sicily's Mount Etna eruption sends huge plumes of ash into air: See video
Italy's Mount Etna, Europe's tallest volcano erupted Monday causing tourists to seek safety.
Several videos online have shown people fleeing as smoke and ash billowed from the side of the volcano. Mount Etna, located on Sicily, joins Hawaii's Kilauea volcano as one of 47 volcanoes actively erupting this year.
According to a Facebook post by Italy's National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology the eruption was "probably produced by the collapse of material from the northern side of the Southeast Crater."
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Mount Etna eruption sends tourists running for their lives
Tourists ran for their lives as Mount Etna erupted, sending huge ash plumes into the sky.
A translation of the post adds that 'from preliminary observations, the hot pyroclastic material does not appear to have crossed the edge of the Valle del Leone (Valley of the Lion, an archaeological site). Contextually, the explosive activity from the Southeast Crater has moved to a lava fountain.'
According to GB News, an international news outlet, an institute spokesperson said "the values of the tremor amplitude are currently high with a tendency to increase further."
Mount Etna is Europe's tallest active volcano
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, volcanic activity in the Mount Etna area can vary from explosive eruptions to lava flows and ash emissions. The active stratovolcano is well-known for its frequent and continuous eruptions.
How volcanos differ in shape and size
The volcano has a 500,000-year history of eruptions, with at least 2,700 years of such activity recorded, according to UNESCO, a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Mount Etna is one of the most researched and closely watched volcanoes in the world today.
CONTRIBUTING Taylor Ardrey
SOURCE National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology, U.S. Geological Survey, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, GB News and USA TODAY research
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