
Italy's Mount Etna erupts, forcing tourists to flee
The 10,925-foot mountain is one of the world's most active volcanoes. Monday's eruption is the largest since 2014, according to Italy's National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology Observatory, which noted "explosions of increasing intensity" that were "almost continuous."
The observatory shared video on its Facebook page, showing the large eruption and collapse of Etna's southeast crater.
"An interdisciplinary group of researchers from the PRIN-Volando project, among which INGV staff were present sends us a video of the pyroclastic flow that happened recently," INGV wrote in a post.
INGV Vulcani later wrote that "the Southeast Crater has become a lava fountain," as the group revealed infrared images of lava flowing down the mountain.
The observatory said it first recorded changes in the mountain as volcanic tremors hit at 11:39 p.m., local time, before confirming there was a "Strombolian" eruption, which included intermittent explosions.
Etna is the most active volcano in Europe and the most active stratovolcano -- a conical mountain with a central crater -- in the world.
Mount Etna erupts at least once every year with its last significant eruption in 2024 and before that in 2023, when flights near Sicily were grounded. Air travel on Monday was not impacted, but tourists summiting the mountain were forced to flee to safety.
Monday's eruption is posing no danger to the island's population, according to officials.
"Over the past few hours, the falling of a little thin ash has been flagged in the Piano Vetore area," INGV said, as the observatory announced that the eruption is over.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
a day ago
- Miami Herald
North Korea opens massive beach resort, will welcome Russian tourists
SEOUL, July 2 (UPI) --North Korea opened a massive beach resort on its east coast to the public, state-run media said Wednesday, with Russian guests expected to start arriving next week. The Wonsan Kalma coastal tourist area officially opened on Tuesday, Korean Central News Agency reported, welcoming its first domestic visitors from around the country. The resort's 2.5-mile-long beach was filled with guests "bathing in the clean and blue East Sea, taking high-speed boats, driving motorcycles on silver-colored sandy beach and having photos taken with joy and optimism of enjoying the best coastal tourist civilization before anyone else," KCNA reported. Guests at the "world-class" facility also enjoyed slides and other water park amusements, the report said. At a ribbon-cutting ceremony last week, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un called the completion of the resort one of the country's "greatest successes this year." "The Wonsan Kalma coastal tourist area should play a leading role in establishing the tourist culture of the DPRK," he said, using the official name for North Korea. Launched in 2014, the sprawling Wonsan tourist zone was initially slated to open in April 2019 but faced numerous setbacks, including international sanctions on materials and COVID-19 pandemic closures. The facility features houses, hotels and hostels for nearly 20,000 people. International tourism offers a chance for the sanctions-hit North to earn foreign currency, but visitors have been almost nonexistent since Pyongyang sealed its borders at the start of the pandemic in January 2020. Russia's TASS news agency reported last week that the first group of Russian tourists would depart for the resort on July 7. Their eight-day vacation package also includes a visit to key attractions in Pyongyang, TASS said. The two countries have expanded their military and economic ties over the past year, highlighted by Pyongyang supplying troops and weapons to Moscow for its war against Ukraine. Russian travelers were the first to return to North Korea post-COVID, when an Air Koryo passenger flight arrived from Vladivostok early last year. Direct rail service between Pyongyang and Moscow also resumed last week. South Korea's Unification Ministry estimated that only a small number of Russian tourists will be able to visit the resort, however. Up to 170 Russians can arrive each day on existing flight routes, the ministry estimated, according to news agency Yonhap. In February, a handful of Western travel agencies began offering small group tours to Rason, a special economic zone in the northeast of the country near the borders of China and Russia. However, North Korea abruptly halted the visits after less than three weeks. The United States last month extended its ban on travel to North Korea for the ninth year in a row, citing "imminent danger" posed by any trips to the authoritarian state. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Miami Herald
2 days ago
- Miami Herald
Boaters spot ‘greyhounds of the sea' off CA coast. See the ‘non-stop' action
Boaters got 'lucky enough' to spot a plethora of sea creatures off the coast of California, spotting multiple species in one day. On June 30, boaters encountered 'non-stop' action when, in only 200 feet of water, they saw a minke whale, according to a Facebook post by San Diego Whale Watch. Passengers were on the edge of their seat while the whale was 'cruising in every direction,' the group said. Minke whales are the smallest baleen whale in North American waters and can reach lengths of up to 35 feet and weigh 20,000 pounds, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The whale kept everyone's attention as it kept surfacing before passengers came across a pod of 400 long-beaked dolphins racing through anchovy bait balls, the group said. Soon after, the group spotted one of the 'greyhounds of the sea' – a fin whale, the group said. Fin whales, able to speed at 29 mph, made for a show before onlookers got a chance to see a baby great white shark, the group said. Fin whales are the second-largest whale species on the planet and have a 'distinctive coloration – black or dark brownish-gray on the back and sides and white on the underside,' according to the NOAA. The magic didn't stop there, as the group later spotted a humpback whale breaching and tail-slapping, the group said. Humpback whales' tails can reach 18 feet wide and have different 'pigmentation patterns, in combination with varying shapes and sizes of whales' flukes and/or prominent scars' that can be used as 'fingerprints' to help identify them, according to the NOAA. The boat's captain had a 'great hunch' and began heading toward La Jolla, the group said. Boaters saw a 'massive splash' and after using their binoculars, spotted a 'very surface-active humpback whale' slapping its tail against the ocean's surface, the group said. Then the ultimate show took place, leaving the group 'squealing with excitement' – the humpback breached three times, slapping its tail, before surfacing only 20 feet away from the boat, the group said. Although the breaches were 'random and unpredictable,' which meant photos of the moment were limited, the group was able to land a 'triple baleen whale species day,' the post said.


UPI
2 days ago
- UPI
Watch: 21-year-old rows across Atlantic Ocean, earning three world records
July 1 (UPI) -- A 21-year-old British woman rowed 4,366 miles across the Atlantic Ocean, becoming the youngest person to ever do so -- and earning three world records in the process. Zara Lachlan set out from Lagos, Portugal, in her 24-foot boat and rowed 4,366 miles -- 3,794 nautical miles -- to Cayenne, French Guinea, a trip lasting 97 days, 10 hours and 20 minutes. Lachlan earned three Guinness World Records in the process: first female to row across the Atlantic from Europe to South America (mainland to mainland), youngest person to row solo across the Atlantic from Europe to South America and the youngest person to row any ocean solo (female). "I just really enjoyed the whole experience. I thought I would be a lot more scared than I was," she told Guinness World Records. Lachlan said she rowed for at least 17 hours on every day of her journey, never sleeping for more than 90 minutes at a time. "That doesn't work for everyone, but I'm young and I know that I can work off of that amount of sleep," she said.