和谐英语

您现在的位置是:首页 > 图片英语新闻

正文

Thousands evacuate after Chile volcano Chaiten erupts

2008-05-08来源:和谐英语
BEIJING, May 7 (Xinhuanet) -- Chile's long-dormant Chaiten volcano spewed clouds of gray smoke, hot rocks and toxic gas on Tuesday, forcing authorities to order the complete evacuation of two nearby towns, media reports said.

    More than 4,000 people left the town of Chaiten, 10 kilometers (six miles) from the volcano, after the initial eruption. Several hundred are still waiting to leave. Futaleufu, 70 kilometers (44 miles) to the east, is also being evacuated.

    The volcano's column of smoke and ash stretched more than 19 kilometers (12 miles) into the sky on Monday, Chile's National Geology and Mineral Service reported, and it extended well into neighboring Argentina and to the Atlantic Ocean.

Residents of Chaiten, a town close to the erupting volcano in Chile, arrive at a port to evacuate from following eruption of the Chaiten volcano, May 6, 2008. An evacuation of Chaiten Town and regions around had been underway since the volcano's first eruption on last Friday.

Residents of Chaiten, a town close to the erupting volcano in Chile, arrive at a port to evacuate from following eruption of the Chaiten volcano, May 6, 2008. An evacuation of Chaiten Town and regions around had been underway since the volcano's first eruption on last Friday.

Chilean officials said molten rock was being thrown from the volcano but that no lava flows had been detected.

    The five-day-old eruption is the first in at least 9,000 years for the volcano in southern Chile, according to volcanologists at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.

    A government vulcanologist warned there could be a big eruption at any time.

Residents of Futaleufu, a town near the erupting volcano in Chile, wait on a bus to evacuate to Argentina’s Esquel City, May 6, 2008. An evacuation of regions around the volcano had been underway since the volcano's first eruption on Friday.

Residents of Futaleufu, a town near the erupting volcano in Chile, wait on a bus to evacuate to Argentina's Esquel City, May 6, 2008

    "There could be a major explosion that could collapse the volcano's cone," said Luis Lara of the National Geologic and Mining Service.