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Large
explosive eruption reported at Kamchatka’s Bezymianny volcano
2
September, 2012
A
larger explosive eruption occurred at Bezymianny volcano in Kamchatka
yesterday evening (1 Sep) around 19h15 GMT. The explosion produced an
ash cloud rising to about 10 km altitude (flight level 340) and was
first detected by Tokyo VAAC who sent out an ash-cloud aviation
warning (major intercontinental routes pass this area).
The ash plume
is rapidly drifting west and has already reached hundreds of
kilometer length. As of today (2 Sep), the eruption of the volcano is
gradually finishing, but ash plumes are extending more 370 mi (600
km) to the east-north-east of the volcano.
Ongoing activity could
affect international and low-flying aircraft. According to seismic
data by KB GS RAS, the eruption began at 19:16 UTC on September 01,
2012. According to visual data, ash plumes rose up to 32,800 –
39,400 ft (10-12 km) a.s.l. at 19:30 UTC on September 01.
According
to seismic data, an explosive phase of eruption continued till 19:45
UTC on September 01, and later there was a volcanic tremor was
registered about 2 hours. There is no ash near Bezymianny volcano
now, but ash plumes are extending to the east-north-east of the
volcano about 550-600 km of the volcano (MTSAT at 2132 UTC on
September 01)
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