The
Turrialba volcano has spewed a fresh column of smoke and ash that reached Costa
Rica's capital, San Jose, 60 kilometers away, authorities say. Its previous
rumble had come just last Thursday.
Deutsche Welle, 5 May 2015
The
moderate eruption, which included rocks around the crater area, hit at about
2100 UTC on Monday, raising eyebrows but not great alarm about 40 miles away,
in Costa Rica's capital, San Jose, the Volcanic and Seismic Center reported.
Accompanied
by a strong smell of sulfur and a coating of ash falling from as high as 2.5
kilometers (1.5 miles) in San Jose, the eruption of the the 3,340-meter (10,950-foot)
volcano lasted about a half hour.
Inactive
for 130 years, Turrialba rumbled back to life in the 1990s. In late October
last year, the volcano erupted with great force, spewing ash and magma.
It has
rumbled ever since. An eruption in early March (pictured) shut down Juan
SantamarĂa, the main international airport, for nearly two days. Monday's
eruption did not look like it would lead to flight cancellations.
VIDEO - #CostaRica's #Turrialba #volcano erupting on 4/5/15. Explosion at 0:33. Watch here: http://t.co/9FfzSQPDo2 pic.twitter.com/kwDVaEvwbX
— Susie Martin Wx (@smartinWX) 4 mei 2015
There have
been a number of natural disasters owing to seismic activity in recent weeks.
Nepal is facing a long rebuilding process after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake in
April devastated the country.
In late
April, the eruption of a volcano in Chile shut down airports in multiple South
American countries. In eastern Congo, the active volcano Mount Nyiragongo has
been called a ticking " time bomb."
mkg/bk (AFP, EFE, dpa, AP)

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