LEGAZPI CITY- Philippine volcanologists
have expressed fears that a more ‘hazardous eruption’ will result as the ‘quiet
eruption’ continued July 23, sending more molten rocks rolling down its slopes.
The government has expanded the danger
zone to seven kilometers on the southeastern slope where the lava is rolling
down and stockpiled food and prepared evacuation centers should the volcano,
with the most perfect cone in the world, erupt.
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Renato Solidum, chief of the Philippine
Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) said he would not order an
immediate evacuation of the area surrounding the 2,474-meter (8,118-foot)
volcano because a possible violent eruption could take weeks.
Meanwhile, some officials in this capital
of Albay are looking into the possibility of luring tourists to watch the
eruption. Already, residents of this city have watched in awe as lava flowed
down the slope from the crater, stirring up brownish-grey clouds of volcanic
dust in their wake.
“What is happening now is a mild and
quiet type of eruption,” Solidum said. “What we are watching is the rate by
which this magma is being extruded. If it is faster and stronger, it will lead
to more hazardous eruptions."
Volcanologist Ed Laguerta said red-hot
boulders, some the size of cars, broke into smaller pieces after being expelled
from the crater, piling up about four kilometers (2.5 miles) down the
southeastern slope.
Explosive eruptions could occur “as
gas-rich lavas are expelled,” the volcanology institute warned. Solidum said
earlier such an eruption may happen “within weeks.”
Mayon’s most violent eruption, in 1814,
killed more than 1,200 people and buried an entire town in volcanic mud. An
eruption in 1993 killed 79 people.
In the evening, one can see the
two-kilometer long streak of lava slowly snaking its way down the southeastern
slope, said Jukes Nunez, an operations officer with the provincial disaster
officer.
Nunez said an eruption warning system
already is in place for quick evacuation of nearby communities, and radio
stations also will broadcast emergency calls.
“There is no more human activity” within
the six to seven kilometer (3.75-4-mile) danger zone, Nunez said.
Cedric Daep, Albay provincial disaster
action officer, said relief officials were stockpiling food and readying
evacuation centers. Daep said groups have been formed to transport evacuees,
provide security for abandoned communities, and provide health and sanitation
services at the centers.
Mayon, one of the country’s 22 active
volcanos, last came to life in a series of eruptions in 2001, forcing the
evacuation of more than 60,000 people. It has erupted about 50 times since
1616.
In February, scientists closely monitored
Mayon after low-frequency quakes and ash puffs indicated magma was rising in its crater.
Phivolcs recorded 147 low-frequency
volcanic earthquakes over a 1.5-hour period, compared with five or fewer during
quiet times.
“These low-frequency volcanic earthquakes
were relatively large and are interpreted to be caused by the shallow movement
of magma within the summit crater," a bulletin issued by the institute
said.
The volcano has been restless since
October 2004, when officials raised the second of a five-level alert system,
indicating “increasing unrest,” and warned villagers to stay out of a permanent
6-kilometer (3.75-mile) danger zone.
The Philippines is in the Pacific “Ring
of Fire,” where volcanic activity and earthquakes are common. Bulusan volcano,
about 50 kilometers (31 miles) south of Mayon, has ejected ash in about five
minor explosions since March.
Last month, Phivolcs were closely
monitoring Bulusan Volcano in nearby Sorsogon province after alert level was
raised to 2 (probable eruptions in months or weeks).
In June 1991, Mount Pinatubo exploded in
the northern Philippines
in one of the world’s biggest volcanic eruptions of the 20th century, killing
about 800 people.