ETNA - Calm now

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BBC Etna: Calm after the storm Etna: Smoking but calm for now

Brian Barron travels to Mount Etna to survey the aftermath of the volcano's most violent eruption for nearly a decade.

After the days and nights of Mount Etna's fury, a few defiant plumes of ash and smoke drift up from the crater, but the worst is certainly over.

Within 48 hours the emergency authorities reckon they will be able to lift the state of emergency.

On a roadside on the slopes below the summit, two British vulcanologists have set up the latest infra-red equipment to measure gas emissions from the volcano as part of the overall Italian emergency operation.

"It was awesome watching it up close," said Michael Burton, one of the British scientists.

"We are going to be monitoring this volcano for the next few months to make sure that if anything happens we will be able to sound the alarm straight away," he added.

Diverted flow

Surveying the lava flow from a civil defence helicopter, Professor Franco Barberi, who headed the emergency operation pointed out where the lava had been successfully diverted or brought to a halt.

The flow was stopped just 4 km (2.4 miles) from Nicolosi, the nearest town.

Hovering over the new volcanic cone, which fell silent two weeks ago, it was here that huge clouds of ash, smoke and molten rock were propelled thousands of feet into the air.

Professor Barberi said this was the biggest eruption for nearly a decade - a dramatic display of volcanic power that caught the world's attention.

Now he has withdrawn the convoy of bulldozers which spent three weeks carving out diversion channels.

'You never really know'

With a professional mountain guide, we drove round the isolated northern side of Mount Etna to a point just below the main crater.

It is a rough road dotted with volcanic boulders thrown up in the recent eruption, passing an abandoned observatory marooned by lava and ash.

It is only in the last couple of days that what is known as the Philosophers Summit has become accessible again.

Although Mount Etna may be quiet now, at the summit, you never really know.

Only a stone's throw away lies the huge smoking cone that was at the heart of the recent major eruption.

-- Anonymous, August 08, 2001


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