Alerts for 2 Eastern Caribbean volcanoes showing signs of life

Alerts for 2 Eastern Caribbean  volcanoes showing signs of life

Mount Pelée is seen from the port city of Saint-Pierre on the French Caribbean territory of Martinique in 2012. Photo credit: Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP via Getty Images.

 

ST. VINCENT/MARTINIQUE--Scientists are keeping a close watch on two volcanoes in the Eastern Caribbean that have been quiet for decades.

  Lava began oozing out of La Soufrière volcano in St. Vincent and the Grenadines on December 29.

  Scientists with the Seismic Research Centre at The University of the West Indies said there was no explosive eruption. Instead, the magma reaching the surface is forming a growing dome in La Soufrière’s crater. The volcano is also releasing gas and steam.

  The alert level on the northern end of the island of St. Vincent, where La Soufrière sits, has been raised to orange, which means an eruption could occur with less than 24 hours’ notice.

  However, no evacuations have been ordered, according to the country’s National Emergency Management Organisation.

  People living near the volcano could experience strong sulphur smells for several days or weeks, the Seismic Research Centre said.

  The last time La Soufrière erupted in 1979, more than 20,000 people were evacuated. An eruption in 1902 killed 1,565 people. Before that, the last major eruption was in 1812.

  About 100 miles to the north, Mount Pelée on the French island of Martinique also is rumbling.

  On December 3, officials with the Martinique volcanological and seismological observatory advised raising the alert level to yellow after detecting seismic activity under the mountain, according to a news release from the observatory.

  An increase in seismic activity since April 2019 and the detection of two tremors on November 8 and 9, 2020, led the observatory to recommend raising the alert level, which the government did.

  It was the first alert of its kind issued since the volcano last erupted in 1932. An eruption in 1902 killed nearly 30,000 people and destroyed the port of Saint-Pierre, according to Encyclopaedia Britannica.

  Volcanologist Erik Klemetti, at Denison University in Ohio, told the Associated Press the activity at Mount Pelée and La Soufrière is not related.

  “It’s not like one volcano starts erupting that others will,” he said. “It falls into the category of coincidence.” ~ The Weather Channel ~

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