A column of volcanic ash spewed skyward and blanketed a city in southern Japan on Tuesday, grounding flights at a nearby airport as the ash reached a height of 7,500 feet in Mount Shinmoedake’s most violent eruption since 2011.
The volcano billowed smoke and ash from smaller eruptions last week, local media reported, but the new series of eruptions on the country’s southern island of Kyushu was a significant increase of potentially dangerous activity, Japan’s Meteorological Agency said in an Associated Press report.
The smoke forced the Kagoshima Airport to cancel all flights after 3 p.m. local time, an airport announcement read. The airport is about a 20-mile drive from the base of the volcano. It operates about 80 flights per day, the wire service reported.
A thick film of soot covered cars in Kirishima city at the base of the volcano, about 4,660 feet tall. People wore surgical masks and covered their mouths with towels, the AP reported. Others used umbrellas to shield themselves from the settling ash. Lava continued to simmer inside the crater, and the meteorological agency warned about the risk of dense volcanic rocks hurling through the air.