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Down Under
Thousands flee Vanuatu volcano
2005-12-06
Thousands of people are being evacuated from their homes in the Pacific island chain of Vanuatu amid fears a major volcano is about to erupt.
Mount Manaro, on the island of Ambae, reportedly began spewing out ash and steam on 27 November and is said to be continually shaking. There are fears that if Manaro did erupt it may also unleash a mud stream from a lake inside its crater.

Vanuatu - a chain of 83 islands - lies just over 2,000km north east of Sydney. Some 2,000 tons of ash a day are reported to be falling round the base of Mount Manaro. Five thousand people living in villages at the base of the mountain have been ordered to move to local schools and halls on the coast, according to the Associated Press.

"There have been several eruptions on the island in the past and this [event] at the moment seems to be typical of some of the larger eruptions that we've had," New Zealand vulcanologist Steve Sherburn told AP.
Posted by:Steve

#6  I blame the Halliburton Volcanic Disruption Division
Posted by: Frank G   2005-12-06 18:08  

#5  Look on the bright side: it'll probably set global warming back several decades.
Posted by: Xbalanke   2005-12-06 17:21  

#4  Also:

From Wikipedia

excerpt :

The Next Krakatoa

The Ambae volcano, Manaro, is one of the world's top ten 'most dangerous' volcanoes. This refers its potential for a catastrophic eruption. Still active, the volcano shows little sign of activity or release since it is plugged and filled with crater lakes. One theory has it that given a large eruption, the lakewater will become superheated steam and cause a massive, Krakatoa-like explosion. The resulting landslides down the island's steep slopes could cause tsunamis within the northern archipelago.


References in Fiction

Ambae may have been an inspiration for James Mitchener's "Balai-hai" in the famous novel "Tales of the South Pacific." Much of this novel is set in Luganville, Santo island, which was built by the US military as a rear-echelon base during World War II. Mitchener, a US Navy officer, was actually stationed there for some time during the war and supposedly looked out to the east from Luganville, where he caught the fleeting glimpse of a cloud-topped, volcano-peaked island. This was, of course, Ambae, which on a clear day can be viewed this way from Luganville - in fact quite a romantic sight. However, in Mitchener's novel there are two islands, Balai-hai and Vanicoro, the former being slightly behind and hidden by the latter. Balai-hai was a lush tropical paradise where the French and Tonkinese women took refuge from the rascally American troops stationed on Santo; Vanicoro was a dark, volcanic island of savages. Now, the people of Ambae are a wonderful lot and were hardly cannibals in the 1940s, but judging from Mitchener's fictionalized description, Ambae seems more an inspiration for Vanicoro than for Balai-hai.

Posted by: BigEd   2005-12-06 14:39  

#3  Volcano Reports


Tuesday 6th December 2005

Ambae volcano has been raised to level 2 alert, indicating regular
eruptions are occurring at the summit. Ambae volcano began erupting last
week, after being dormant for about 120 years. 5000 people are being evacuated
from dangerous areas in the east and west of the island.
Posted by: BigEd   2005-12-06 14:32  

#2  What? Tough finding virgins these days?
Posted by: Cravitle Elmeremp2989   2005-12-06 11:13  

#1  Wow! I’m sure glad I decided not to hide my millions there after all!
Posted by: Secret Master   2005-12-06 11:09  

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