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Throat of Fire
Photograph by Carlos Campana, Reuters
Fire and large clouds of gas and ash spew from the mouth of Ecuador's Tungurahua volcano, 84 miles (135 kilometers) southeast of the capital city of Quito.
The 16,475-foot (5,023-meter) volcano has been erupting intermittently since October 1999, but more aggressive activity prompted the authorities to raise the security alert from "moderate" to "high" this week.
Ecuadorean authorities told the Associated Press that more than a hundred families have been evacuated from the vicinity of Tungurahua—which means "throat of fire" in the region’s indigenous Quechua language.
(Related volcano pictures: “‘Throat of Fire’ Erupts.”)
--Ker Than
Published August 23, 2012
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Tungurahua Never Sleeps
Photograph by Jose Jacome, European Pressphoto Agency
A local resident stands in front of Ecuador's Tungurahua volcano on August 21, 2012.
(More Tungurahua Pictures: “‘Scary’ Volcano Erupts in Ecuador.”)
Ecuadorean authorities are encouraging residents living near the volcano to evacuate due to the volcano's increased activity, according to local media.
Mercedes Taipe, a spokesperson for Ecuador's Geophysics Institute, told the Associated Press that half a dozen villages have been showered in ash so far.
Published August 23, 2012
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Ash Cow
Photograph by Carlos Campana, Reuters
Ash from Ecuador's Tungurahua volcano covers a cow on August 19, 2012.
Prior to 1999, the volcano's last major eruption occurred from 1916 to 1918, with minor activity continuing until 1925, according to the Smithsonian Institution's Global Volcanism Program.
(Related: “Iceland Volcano Pictures: Lightning Adds Flash to Ash.”)
Published August 23, 2012
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Firestorm
Photograph by Gary Granja, Reuters
Lava, ash, and superheated rock were flung into the air during an eruption of Ecuador's Tungurahua volcano this week.
Tungurahua "certainly ranks as one of the volcanoes that keeps people up at night," Smithsonian Institution volcanologist Richard Wunderman told National Geographic News last year.
"It's scary," he said.
Published August 23, 2012
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Ash Analysis
Photograph by Gary Granja, Reuters
Carlos Sanchez analyzes samples of volcanic ash from Tungurahua in Baños, Ecuador, on August 21, 2012.
Sanchez, 70, calls himself the “Volcano Watcher" because he helps volcanologists by observing Tungurahua from a tree house that is located less than a mile from the volcano's crater.
Published August 23, 2012
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History Repeats Itself?
Photograph by Carlos Campana, Reuters
Dense clouds of volcanic gas and ash billow from the mouth of Ecuador's Tungurahua volcano this week, during a period of heightened activity that caused authorities to raise the security alert from "moderate" to "high."
Eruptions in 2006 killed at least four people, left two missing, and forced the evacuation of thousands of people, according to the Associated Press.
(See a photo of the 2006 eruption.)
Published August 23, 2012
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