张老邪叨哔叨:
菲律宾马尼拉国际机场被关闭了一夜,300多次国内和230多次国际航班被取消。当地时间13日下午开始,机场已经部分重新开放。 火山灰造成卡拉巴松地区若干省电力中断。马尼拉市区也受到影响,所有学生停课,公共服务关闭。菲律宾当局已将主火山口方圆14公里内高风险地区的居民撤离。截至1月13日,已有超过2.45万人在卡拉巴松地区的75个疏散中心避难,其中大部分在八打雁省。据估计,居住在阿尔火山口方圆14公里的危险区内的总人口接近46万人。
Taal Volcano continues to spew ash on Monday Jan. 13, 2020, in Tagaytay, Cavite province, south of Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Transcript
A volcano in the Philippines released smoke and ash on Monday as scientists warned of a possible “explosive eruption.”
Clouds of ash were seen rising from the Taal volcano, which sits on an island south of the Philippine capital, Manila. Local officials said more than 24,000 people had already fled the island and surrounding areas.
The volcanic island has long been a popular stop for visitors.
Experts warned that a powerful eruption could cause strong waves to develop on the lake surrounding the volcano. Officials were planning to evacuate hundreds of thousands of people.
A lack of transport and poor visibility caused evacuation delays in some areas. Officials said some people had refused to leave their homes and property.
A family rides their motorcycle through clouds of ash as they evacuate to safer grounds as Taal volcano in Tagaytay, Cavite province, southern Philippines on Monday, Jan. 13, 2020. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Wilson Maralit is the mayor of Balete, a town that stretches along the water’s edge of Taal Lake, which surrounds the volcano. He told a Philippine radio station that some people were “panicking” from the volcano and felt the need to stay to take care of their farms.
“We’re trying to stop them from returning and warning that the volcano can explode again anytime and hit them,” Maralit said. The mayor appealed for troops and more police to stop people from secretly returning to their high-risk villages.
By Sunday night, ash from the Taal volcano had blown more than 100 kilometers northward to Manila. Conditions forced the city’s main airport to close, with more than 500 flights canceled. Parts of the airport were reopened after the ash fall eased.
Government work and school classes were suspended Monday in many towns and cities, including Manila. Stores quickly sold out of face masks designed to protect against the possible harmful effects of volcanic ash, the French press agency AFP reported.
Residents cleans ash fall from Taal Volcano's eruption Monday Jan. 13, 2020, in Tagaytay, Cavite province, south of Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Steam, ash and rocks blasted up to 15 kilometers into the sky from the volcano, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology reported. Officials said lava was also seen flowing out of the volcano.
Maria Antonia Bornas is a chief science research specialist at the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology. “The speed of escalation of Taal’s volcanic activity caught us by surprise,” she told reporters. She added: “We still can expect a hazardous eruption any time.”
Marilou Baldonado lives in the nearby town of Laurel. She told Reuters news agency she fled her home with only two sets of clothes after she saw a huge ash cloud form.
“We got scared of what could happen to us, we thought the volcano was going to erupt already,” Baldonado said.
The Taal volcano’s last disastrous explosion happened in 1965, when more than 200 people were killed.
I’m Bryan Lynn.
Words in This Story
eruption – n. the release of rocks, ash, lava, etc. in a sudden explosion
evacuate – v. move people from a dangerous place to somewhere else
visibility – n. how far or well a person can see
mayor – n. the top government official in a city of town
panic – v. to suddenly feel so worried or frightened that you cannot think or behave calmly
lava – n. hot melted rock that comes out of a volcano
escalation – n. when a violent or bad situation becomes worse or more serious
hazardous – adj. dangerous
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