NZ:
Mt Tongariro erupts, warning for central NI
Mt
Tongariro has erupted, with ash fall closing roads and prompting a
potential threat warning for central North Island regions.
7
August, 2012
The
eruption at 11.50pm last night threw rocks and spewed ash from the Te
Mari craters, near Ketetahi hot springs, on the northern side of the
mountain, GNS Science said.
A
trucker, Bryn Rodda, said he saw part of the eruption.
"I
could see this big cloud, it looked like a fist basically, at an
angle across the sky...and at about the wrist section of the fist
there was an orange ball of flash that I saw, that was all I could
see," he told Radio New Zealand.
This
morning an ash plume could be seen amongst the cloud that was
covering the mountain.
Civil
Defence said volcanic activity could pose a threat to Waikato,
Hawke's Bay, Gisborne, Manawatu-Whanganui, Bay of Plenty and
Taranaki.
People
living in those areas were advised to stay indoors with all the
windows and doors closed and listen to the radio for updated
emergency information and instructions.
The
Desert Road section of State Highway 1, northeast of the mountain,
and State Highway 46, to the north, had been closed due to the ash.
Motorists
were being advised to avoid travel in the area. The road closures
would be reassessed at daylight.
Light
ash had been reported as falling on SH1 and SH46 and as far as SH5,
near Te Haroto and onto Napier city.
An
incident management centre had been set up at Whakapapa DOC visitor
centre, and local council, police and Department of Conservation were
meeting in Taupo this morning.
There
had been no further volcanic activity reported since last night.
Civil
Defence has not activated the National Crises Management Centre.
Inspector
Ian Harris, of police central communications, said search and rescue
teams would be sent up the mountain at dawn to check that no one had
been stranded in huts.
There
had been no reports of injuries or damage because of the eruption and
no evacuation notices had been issued, he said.
However,
GNS Science duty volcanologist Michael Rosenberg said some people in
the Lake Rotoaira area had self-evacuated following the eruption.
There
had been reports of "red hot rocks being thrown out of the
crater", several loud explosions and lightning when the eruption
occurred and ash had fallen 5cm deep on SH46, he said.
The
eruption had been "really unexpected".
"You
can measure and monitor but sometimes mother nature will do her own
thing."
GNS
Science planned to send observers to the mountain later this morning,
Rosenberg said.
A
service station attendant at the Caltex Service Station in Raetihi,
beneath the southern slopes of Mt Ruapehu, said the highway between
National Park and Raetihi was still open.
She
said no ash had fallen on Raetihi overnight.
A
worker at the BP Service Station in Turangi, John MacRae, said while
no ash had fallen in Turangi this morning, there was "a sulphur
smell round the place".
FLIGHTS
AFFECTED
Civil
aviation director of meteorology Peter Lechner said the eruption
would affect regional flights.
"The
ash cloud is obviously stretching from the moutain out towards the
east, so by about 9 o'clock this morning we expect that plume to
cover probably Gisborne south through Hawke's Bay, perhaps into the
northern Wairarapa.
"So
air travel into those areas, namely Gisborne, Hawke's Bay aerodrome,
and of course Taupo aerodrome will probably be affected by the ash,"
he told Radio New Zealand.
Airlines
would need to decide whether they would continue flying in and out of
that area, Lechner said.
"It's
up to them to stay clear of the ash. If they can find a clear way
through that's fine."
Flights
overhead, such as from Auckland to Wellington, would not be affected.
Those flights were usually at about 30,000 to 35,000 feet while the
ash plume was about 20,000 feet, Lechner said.
If
the weather patterns continue, the ash could be pushed out to sea by
about 6pm tonight, Lechner said.
"As
long as there are no further eruptions, that's a good thing."
There
were five reported eruptions from the Te Mari craters between 1855
and 1897 but they had been dormant until now, the GeoNet website
said.
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