An Alaska volcano
spewing ash and lava for the past six weeks erupted with new intensity early on
Tuesday, belching a plume of cinders 5 miles into sky and onto a nearby town
and disrupting local flights, officials said.
The eruptions from
Pavlof Volcano, on the Alaska Peninsula 590 miles southwest of Anchorage, were
its most powerful since its current eruptive phase began with low-level
rumblings in mid-May, according to scientists at the federal-state Alaska
Volcano Observatory.
The latest series of
more powerful ash-producing blasts from the crater of the 8,261-foot
(2,518-meter) volcano started late on Monday and continued overnight into
Tuesday, scientists said.
"For some reason
we can't explain, it picked up in intensity and vigor," said Tina Neal, an
observatory geologist.
While the ash plume has
so far remained too low in the sky to affect jetliner traffic, topping out at
an altitude of 28,000 feet, smaller planes had to fly around it, officials
said. Anchorage-based PenAir canceled one flight and re-routed others, said
Missy Roberts, a company vice president.
Ash has dusted King
Cove, a town of about 900 people located 30 miles southwest of Pavlof, the
Alaska Volcano Observatory reported.
The National Weather
Service issued an ash advisory for the region, warning of breathing problems
for people with respiratory ailments and potential damage to exposed electronic
equipment.
A second Alaska
Peninsula volcano continued a low-intensity eruption, the observatory said. Ash
from Veniaminof Volcano, 485 miles southwest of Anchorage, has been limited to
the area around its 8,225-foot (2,507-meter) summit, the observatory said.
The eruptions at Pavlof
and Veniaminof are unrelated, scientists say.
A third, more remote,
Alaska volcano remained restless but was not currently spouting lava or ash,
the observatory said. Cleveland Volcano, 940 miles southwest of Anchorage,
began an on-and-off eruptive phase in mid-2011 but has not produced an
explosive eruption since May 6, according to the observatory.
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