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Mount Etna eruption live: Crater still smouldering after tourists flee strongest volcanic blast in four years - Footage shared on social media shows huge clouds of black smoke after the eruption ...
Smoke rises from the crater of the Etna volcano as it erupts, on Mount Etna near Catania, Italy, on Monday. A huge plume of ash, gas and rock spewed forth from Europe's highest active volcano.
Europe's most active volcano, Mount Etna on Sicily, is erupting again, sending tourists running away from a huge plume of ash and smoke in the air and lava flowing down its slope.
Italy's Mount Etna, Europe's tallest volcano, erupted on June 2, causing tourists to seek safety. Several videos online have shown people fleeing as smoke and ash billowed from the side of the ...
Mount Etna exhibits a Strombolian eruption, with a volcanic plume rising from the southeast crater, on June 2, 2025 in Catania, Italy. Fabrizio Villa/Getty Images ...
Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology said the spectacle ensued when part of the southeast crater on Europe’s most active volcano collapsed.
Several videos circulating online show people running as smoke from the side of Mount Etna filled the air on June 2.
The eruption caused a pyroclastic lava flow, a dangerous situation that occurs when “volcanic rock, ash, and hot gases” project from volcanoes. “The partial collapse of the Southeast Crater ...
The lava flows and ash clouds were probably caused by the collapse of a flank of Etna’s southeast crater, authorities said, adding there was no danger to the population. June 3, 2025.
At the same time, the explosive activity from the Southeast crater has changed to a lava fountain. The volcanic tremor has reached very high values.
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