Indonesia’s Merapi volcano spews hot clouds, 500 evacuate

Local authorities evacuated more than 500 people living on the mountain in Magelang district on Java Island

January 07, 2021 11:45 am | Updated March 30, 2021 12:47 pm IST - JAKARTA, Indonesia

Mount Merapi spews volcanic steam from its crater seen from Sleman, Yogyakarta, Indonesia on January 7, 2021.

Mount Merapi spews volcanic steam from its crater seen from Sleman, Yogyakarta, Indonesia on January 7, 2021.

Indonesia’s Mount Merapi volcano spewed avalanches of hot clouds on January 7 morning as more than 500 residents were evacuated from its fertile slopes.

Fog was covering the volcano at the time, so the distance the pyroclastic clouds spread was not visually observed. The amplitude record and seismic recording data from Geological Disaster Technology Research and Development Center estimated the hot clouds spread less than 1 kilometer (0.6 miles) from the crater.

Local authorities on January 7 evacuated more than 500 people living on the mountain in Magelang district on Java Island.

“Until now, the potential danger is not more than 5 kilometres [3 miles],” chief of Yogyakarta’s Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation Center, Hanik Humaida, said in a statement.

The geological authority had raised the alert level of Mount Merapi to the second-highest level in November after sensors picked up increasing activity. Tourism and mining activities were halted.

The 2,968-meter (9,737-foot) mountain is about 30 kilometres (18 miles) from the Yogyakarta city centre. About a quarter million people live within 10 kilometres (6 miles) of the volcano, according to authorities in surrounding districts.

It spewed ash and hot gas in a column as high as 6 kilometres (3.7 miles) into the sky in June, but no casualties were reported.

Its last major eruption in 2010 killed 347 people and caused the evacuation of 20,000 villagers.

Indonesia, an archipelago of more than 250 million people, sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire” and is prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. Government seismologists monitor more than 120 active volcanoes.

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