RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service
2014-02-26 04:24:03 - VOLCANO ERUPTION - COSTA RICA
2014-02-26 04:24:03 [UTC]
Continent: Central-America
Country: Costa Rica
State/Prov.: Cordillera Central,
Location: Poas Volcano,
Description:
The crater of Poas Volcano expelled material 300 meters into
the air at noon on Tuesday. The phenomenon, called a phreatic explosion,
occurred due to a reaction between magma and water at the southern border of
the lake inside the volcano. However, this was not an eruption and the volcano
did not spew lava. Instead, a column of steam, gas and other materials formed
and spouted out the top of the volcano, confirmed the Volcanological and
Seismological Observatory of Costa Rica (OVSICORI).
Maria Martinez Cruz, a
volcanology and geochemistry expert with OVSICORI, said the event can be
considered "normal for the volcano's activity, although explosion heights like
the one recorded Tuesday are not that common." This type of explosion,
called phreatic, occurs when the volcano's magma contacts water in the crater's
lagoon and evaporates quickly through fissures. That action results in an blast
of steam, water, ash and small rocks.
"The volcano has been calm for
several months. It's only releasing a lot of gas. This is part of the natural
phenomenon, throwing tall columns of gas into the air, steam, the colors of the
volcanic lake," said Juan Dobles, administrator of the Poas Volcano
National Park. Currently there is no risk to visitors since most materials
dissipate in the wind, Martinez added. Poas Volcano National Park is open from
8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. every day, and visitors can walk to a lookout point to get
a scenic view of the volcano.
The Poas Volcano National Park is the second most
visited in the country after Manuel Antonio National Park in the Pacific.
Martinez, who is part of an expert group currently monitoring the activity at
Poas, added that they have been monitoring the volcano closely since an
increase in the crater's temperature was detected in recent years. The increase
could be an indicator of volcanic activity.
Martinez explained that the average
temperature of the Poas crater in the last 50 years has been 92 degrees Celsius
(198 Fahrenheit), but in 2013 they recorded temperatures between 200-400
degrees Celsius (392-752 degrees Fahrenheit). "Today's explosion reached
720 degrees Celsius (1,328 oF), which is the second highest after those recorded
between June-September 2011 when we recorded temperatures up to 890 degrees
Celsius (1,634 degrees Fahrenheit)," she said.
Posted:2014-02-26 04:24:03 [UTC]
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