Popocatépetl
Volcano
The Popocatépetl Volcano is an active volcano located on the borders of Mexico City. It is considered Mexico's most famous and dangerous volcano due to the close proximity of the 25 million people that live within a 100km radius.
Watch nowEl Popo the Smoking Mountain
The name Popocatépetl comes from the Nahuatl words popōca (Nahuatl pronunciation: [poˈpoːka]) "it smokes" and tepētl [ˈtepeːt͡ɬ] "mountain", meaning Smoking Mountain. The volcano is also referred to by Mexicans as El Popo affectionately, or to shorten the full name. The alternate nickname Don Goyo comes from the mountain's association in the lore of the region with San Gregorio, "Goyo" being a nickname-like short form of Gregorio. The name was extended by those who lived in Santiago Xalitzina, a small community 12 km (7.5 mi) from the volcano. Legend says that many years ago, a villager met an old man on the slopes of the mountain, who introduced himself as Gregorio Chino Popocatépetl. Gregorio was a personification of the spirit of the volcano, and communicates with the locals to warn them if an eruption is about to happen. Thus, every March 12, the day of San Gregorio, the locals bring flowers and food to the volcano to celebrate the saint.
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Frequently asked questions about Mount Etna
Source: Geology.com, Gramps
Mount Etna historically averages a low VEI 1-2, not very explosive. In the past 90 years, it has only caused minor damage to some local buildings, and a few injuries.
Mount Etna consists of two edifices: an ancient shield volcano at its base, and the younger Mongibello stratovolcano, which was built on top of the shield. The basaltic shield volcano eruptions began about 500,000 years ago, while the stratovolcano began forming about 35,000 years ago from more trachytic lavas.
The volcano's slopes currently host several large calderas which formed when the roofs of magma chambers collapsed inward, including the east-facing, horseshoe-shaped Valle de Bove.
The highest tip of Etna is currently about 3,357 m above sea level. This altitude undergoes variations due to material accumulation due to explosions and eruptions and the frequent collapse.
In 2021, the summit gained height from the many lava fountain eruptions. The summit currently consists of Four Craters; the North-eastern Crater formed in 1911, The Chasm 1945, The new Mouth 1968 and the South-East Crater from the 1971 eruption.
The last recorded eruption took place in December 2021. A lateral vent opened on the 13 of December at an altitude of 2800 mt. The eruption lasted just 48 hours. There have been 50 eruptions from Jan - Sept 2021.
As is often the case with explosive / effusive volcanoes with basic magmas, lava flows can go on for weeks, months, years, and sometimes decades. The longest eruption of Etna lasted ten years and went on from 1614 to 1624.
Etna's current activity consists of continuous summit degassing, explosive Strombolian eruptions, and frequent basaltic lava flows. Ash clouds from the explosive eruptions are especially hazardous to aircraft, since ash that is pulled into a jet engine can melt, coat moving parts with a layer of glass, and cause the engine to shut down. These dangerous ash clouds are often visible from space.
Etna has also produced pyroclastic flows, ashfalls, and mudflows, but the lava flows are the most immediately hazardous type of activity, especially to the city of Catania.
The lava flows themselves usually do not move fast enough to threaten humans, but they can cover large areas and destroy crops and buildings. In the event of a large flank (fissure) eruption, evacuating the inhabitants of towns and cities near the volcano would be a huge challenge.
Volcanoes do not burn, there is no smoke or flames, and no combustion. The black plumes are ash (pulverized lava), the lava fountains include small bits called tephra, and larger lava 'bombs'.
The glow is hot gases and lava. Gases include mostly water vapor, CO2 carbon dioxide, and SO2 sulfur dioxide, plus others.Yes, lava contains 1-5% water.
As magma rises to the surface, lower pressure makes gases exsolve (come out of the magma). Gases build up in bubbles, which drives the magma out of the ground. Gas bubbles vary in size, which changes the height of lava fountains, and the rate of lava flow. Lava flow is faster down steep slopes, and over smooth ground. It is slower on flatter slopes and over rough ground or older lava.
Volcanoes are not caused by the moon's gravity, ocean tides, solar flares, or other planets. A volcano will erupt the same during all phases of the moon, solar activity, and earth's orbit. A few volcanoes on coastlines may be slightly affected by high tides. Tides may squeeze the ground, causing slightly higher lava flow.
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