Home — Internet News Lava from La Palma eruption finally reaches the Atlantic

Lava from La Palma eruption finally reaches the Atlantic

by Mary Sewell

The molten rock and seawater meeting finally came at 11 p.m. on Tuesday. By daybreak, a widening promontory of newborn land could form under plumes of steam rising high into the area. Even though the initial air quality reading showed no danger in the area, experts warned that the lava’s arrival at the ocean would likely produce small explosions and release toxic gases that could damage the lungs. Authorities established a security perimeter of 3½ kilometers (about two miles) and asked residents in the wider area to remain indoors with windows shut to avoid breathing in any gases.

No deaths or serious injuries have been reported from the island’s first eruption in 50 years, thanks to the prompt evacuations of over 6,000 people after the ground cracked open following weeks of tremors. The flattening of the terrain as it approached the coast had slowed down the flow of the lava, causing it to widen out and do more damage to villages and farms. The local economy is primarily based on agriculture, above all, the cultivation of the Canary plantain.

Just before it poured down a cliff into the sea at a local point known as Los Guterres, the lava rolled over the coastal highway, cutting off the last road connecting the island to several villages. “We hope that the channel to the sea that has opened stops the lava flow, which widened to reach 600 meters (2,000 feet) at one point, from continuing to grow because that has caused tremendous damage,” Ángel Víctor Torres, president of the Canary Islands regional government, told Cope radio.

Torres said his government is working on housing those who have lost their dwellings. Authorities have plans to purchase over 100 currently unoccupied homes. Torres cited one village, Todoque, home to 1,400 people, which was wiped out. Home to about 85,000 people, La Palma, is part of the volcanic Canary Islands, an archipelago off northwest Africa. The island is roughly 35 kilometers (22 miles) long and 20 kilometers (12 miles) wide at its broadest point.

Cleaning crews swept up ash in the island’s capital, Santa Cruz, while geologists registered more small earthquakes that have rumbled under the volcano for weeks. Favorable weather conditions allowed the first flight in five days to land at an airport on La Palma, a vital tourist destination along with its neighboring Canary islands, despite a vast ash cloud that Spain’s National Geographic Institute said reached up to seven kilometers (nearly 4½ miles) high.

Laura Garcés, the director of Spain’s air navigation authority ENAIRE, said she doesn’t foresee any significant problems for other airports on the archipelago because of the ash. While the red tongue of lava lolled off the coast, the volcano’s two open vents continued spewing up more magma from below. Experts say it’s impossible to determine how long the eruption will last. Previous outbreaks in the archipelago have lasted weeks, even months. “We don’t know when this will be over,” volcano scientist Stavros Meletlidis of Spain’s National Geographic Institute told state broadcaster TVE. “Volcanos are not friends of statistics.”——— Joseph Wilson reported from Barcelona, Spain.

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