Volcanic Eruption In Japan Disrupts Flights
An anonymous reader writes: A volcano in southern Japan erupted today, sending out chunks of magma and a kilometer-high plume of ash. Flights to and from the nearby city of Kumamoto were canceled, and a Japan Airlines spokesman said more could be disrupted if the eruption continues. "Mount Aso, whose huge caldera dominates the southwestern main island of Kyushu, rumbled into life on Tuesday. Meteorologists warned volcanic stones and ash could fall in a one-kilometer radius of the volcano. The eruption is Aso's first in 19 years and comes two months after Mount Ontake in central Nagano killed more than 60 hikers when it erupted without warning."
Know a really big lizard is behind all of this.
This is going to make Thanksgiving travel around there even worse than usual!
I really hope you are trying to be funny.
Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
I really hope you are trying to be funny.
One can always hope, but it seems we've managed to go from "climate change isn't real" to "it causes everything bad that happens."
Of course, a big enough eruption would actually trigger a global cooling trend for a while. Think Krakatoa and Mount Pinatubo.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
The ash cloud is only a kilometer high? Why don't they just fly over it?
If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
an eruption of troll commentary.
I see what you did there.
Its certainly interesting how historical events can be tied to volcanic eruptions. But most in recent (geological) history seem to have only affected the climate for a few years. It goes back to normal because volcanic activity is part of a balanced system. And given that we're not great (AFAIK) at predicting (and believing predictions of...and arresting Italian scientists if they are wrong) specific eruptions more than a week or so in advance and the effects last only a few years, is it even worth trying to add them or is just throwing in the historical averages good enough?
I think people forget that the Mount Aso volcanic caldera is NOT small, and there is the constant threat of a major eruption there. There is a chance--though small--that Mount Aso could erupt with the force and volcanic ash output of Mount Pinatubo in 1991--a scale of eruption that could seriously affect the Japanese economy and could even substantially cool the Earth like what Pinatubo's huge ash output did.