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mount sinabung erupts

eatshitndie

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100829/ts_nm/us_indonesia_volcano

JAKARTA (Reuters) – Thousands of Indonesians were evacuated from the slopes of a volcano on Sunday after it erupted for the first time in more than 400 years, spewing out lava and sending smoke and dust 1,500 meters (5,000 feet) into the air.

Mount Sinabung, in the north of the island of Sumatra, began erupting around midnight after rumbling for several days, prompting some villagers to panic before the mass evacuation got under way.

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The Mount Sinabung volcano spews smoke in the district of Tanah Karo outside the city of Medan, North Sumatra August 29, 2010. The volcano erupted on the Indonesia island of Sumatra on Sunday for the first time in four centuries, sending smoke 1,500 metres (about 5,000 feet) into the air and prompting the evacuation of thousands of residents, officials said.​
 

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Mount Sinabung spews volcanic smoke in Karo, North Sumatra, Indonesia, Sunday, Aug. 29, 2010.​
 

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A man rides a motorcycle in the district of Tanah Karo outside the city of Medan, North Sumatra, as the Mount Sinabung volcano spews smoke in the background August 29, 2010.​
 

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Villagers wearing face masks, who were evacuated from the area around the erupting Mount Sinabung volcano, wait at a shelter in Brastagi outside the city of Medan, North Sumatra August 29, 2010.​
 

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Mount Sinabung volcano spews smoke in Suka Nalu village in the district of Tanah Karo, in Indonesia's North Sumatra province August 30, 2010. The Indonesian volcano that erupted for the first time in centuries on Sunday spewed fresh plumes of smoke early on Monday morning, causing panic in nearby villages and delaying local flights, officials said on Monday.​
 

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Mount Sinabung volcano spews smoke as seen from Bekerah village in the district of Tanah Karo in Indonesia's North Sumatra province August 30, 2010.​
 

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Villagers with their body covered in ash from the erupting Mount Sinabung volcano leave their village on motorcycles in Brastagi outside the city of Medan, North Sumatra August 29, 2010.​
 
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Cao Pi

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Indonesian volcano erupts again, many evacuated


Indonesian volcano erupts again, many evacuated

By Tarmizy Harva SUKA NALU, Indonesia | Mon Aug 30, 2010 2:27am EDT

SUKA NALU, Indonesia (Reuters) - An Indonesian volcano, inactive for four centuries, erupted again on Monday, pitching ash two km (1.5 miles) into the air and sending nearby residents scurrying from their homes. Villages were emptying fast near Mount Sinabung on the north of Sumatra island, leaving behind only officials from the bureau of meteorology and the police.

Short-haul flights skirting the volcano were delayed. Surono, head of Indonesia's vulcanology center, told Reuters Monday's eruption was more powerful than the first a day earlier. "Earlier today was another eruption at 6.30 a.m., sending out smoke as high as two km, more or less," he told Reuters.

A Reuters photographer said he saw plumes of smoke rising from the 2,460-meter volcano after the second eruption. Inactive since 1600, it had been rumbling for several days. "I saw some hot pieces of volcanic rock come out and burn trees in the area," he said. A smell of sulphur pervaded the air as residents moved out of their homes to temporary shelters.

Indonesia is on the so-called Pacific Rim of Fire, an arc of volcanoes and geological fault lines triggering frequent earthquakes around the Pacific Basin. The eruption triggered the highest red volcano alert. About 21,000 people had been evacuated from largely farming areas. Many fled to Medan, 50 km (30 miles), Indonesia's third-largest city, northeast of the volcano.

Officials said much of the movement was unnecessary. "People have been evacuated from areas within a six km (four-mile) radius of the volcano," vulcanologist Surono said. "Beyond six km it is safe, but there has still been a lot of panic among people here who don't understand that." He said it was impossible to know when the eruptions would stop, but it was unlikely volcanic dust would drift to neighboring countries.

"Here, it is three millimeters (1/8 of an inch) thick on the leaves of plants," he said. "It has the potential to damage people's respiratory tracts, but in my lifetime of studying volcanoes I have never heard of anyone dying from inhaling volcanic ash." Andang Santoso, a spokesman for the government air agency PT Angkasa Pura II, said major flight itineraries were unaffected.

"However, there have been delays on the route between Medan and Sibolga," a town south of the volcano, he told Reuters in a telephone text message. Metro TV broadcast a tearful interview with one resident, Maranatha, who had fled her village. "Why did this happen to our village? Why is this my fate?" she said. "We feel very sick and worried. This is very sad for us and it has affected everything."

(Reporting by Sunanda Creagh and Olivia Rondonuwu; Editing by Sara Webb and Ron Popeski)


 
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Cao Pi

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Mount Sinabung volcano spews smoke as seen from Bekerah village in the district of Tanah Karo in Indonesia's North Sumatra province August 30, 2010.


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Villagers in a vehicle leave Suka Nalu village after Mount Sinabung spewed fresh smoke in the district of Tanah Karo,
in Indonesia's North Sumatra province August 30, 2010.



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Mount Sinabung volcano spews smoke in Suka Nalu village in the district of Tanah Karo, in Indonesia's North Sumatra province August 30, 2010.


 
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Cao Pi

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Villagers wearing face masks, who were evacuated from the area around the erupting Mount Sinabung volcano,
wait at a shelter in Brastagi outside the city of Medan, North Sumatra August 29, 2010.



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A woman carrying her child walks on the street at the district of Tanah Karo outside the city of Medan,
North Sumatra, as Mount Sinabung volcano spews smoke in the background August 28, 2010.



 
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Cao Pi

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Villagers load their buffalos on to a truck as they prepare to leave their village after the Mount Sinabung volcano (in the background) erupted,
in the district of Tanah Karo outside the city of Medan, North Sumatra August 29, 2010.



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Cao Pi

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Villagers wearing face masks, who were evacuated from the area around the erupting Mount Sinabung volcano,
wait at a shelter in Brastagi outside the city of Medan, North Sumatra August 29, 2010.



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Mount Sinabung volcano spews smoke as seen from Suka Nalu village in the district of Tanah Karo in Indonesia's North Sumatra province August 30, 2010. The Indonesian volcano, inactive for four centuries, erupted again on Monday, pitching ash two km (1.5 miles) into the air and sending nearby residents scurrying from their homes.


 

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Mount Sinabung spews volcanic materials in Karo, North Sumatra, Indonesia, Monday, Aug. 30, 2010. The volcano that had been dormant for more than four centuries erupted for the second day in a row Monday, spewing out towering clouds of ash and forcing the evacuation of more than 21,000 people.​
 

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Villagers flee their homes as Mount Sinabung spews volcanic materials in Karo, North Sumatra, Indonesia, Monday, Aug. 30, 2010​
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Villagers watch as Mount Sinabung spews volcanic materials in Karo, North Sumatra, Indonesia, Monday, Aug. 30, 2010.

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High school students listen as their principal announces an early dismissal shortly after Mount Sinabung volcano spewed smoke in Brastagi, Indonesia's North Sumatra province August 30, 2010. The volcano, inactive for four centuries, erupted for the second time on Monday, pitching ash two km (1.5 miles) into the air and sending nearby residents scurrying from their homes.​
 

eatshitndie

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yup, thanks for the pics.

this is a reason why i have given up on having a vacation home in singapore, indonesia or malaysia (including johor). the whole giant island of sumatra is a friggin ridge of volcanoes. and toba is the largest, so large it can swallow singapore whole.
 
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