Tourists watch as smoke rises from Stromboli volcano after an eruption started forest fires, in Stromboli, Italy July 4, 2019. REUTERS/Alessio Villari

Home » WATCH Volcano Erupts on Italian Island of Stromboli, Killing Tourist

WATCH Volcano Erupts on Italian Island of Stromboli, Killing Tourist

ROME – A volcano on the Italian island of Stromboli erupted unexpectedly on Wednesday, releasing hot trapped magma in a powerful explosion, killing one person – believed to be a tourist – and enveloping the popular tourist destination in ash, witnesses and local officials said. (Watch video below.) The person, believed to be a tourist, […]

04-07-19 16:50
Tourists watch as smoke rises from Stromboli volcano after an eruption started forest fires, in Stromboli, Italy July 4, 2019. REUTERS/Alessio Villari

ROME – A volcano on the Italian island of Stromboli erupted unexpectedly on Wednesday, releasing hot trapped magma in a powerful explosion, killing one person – believed to be a tourist – and enveloping the popular tourist destination in ash, witnesses and local officials said. (Watch video below.)

Smoke rises from a volcano on the Italian island of Stromboli, Italy. July 4, 2019 REUTERS/Alessio Villari
Ash rises after a volcano eruption in Stromboli, Italy, July 3, 2019 in this image obtained from social media. Gernot Werner Gruber via REUTERS
Tourists watch as smoke rises from Stromboli volcano after an eruption started forest fires, in Stromboli, Italy July 4, 2019. REUTERS/Alessio Villari
Emergency services arrive on the island to assess the damage after the Stromboli volcano erupted killing one person, in Stromboli, Italy July 4, 2019. REUTERS/Alessio Villari

The person, believed to be a tourist, was killed by falling stones during a walk, a rescue service official said. A second person was injured.

According to reports, dozens of tourists jumped into the sea in a bid to escape the eruption.

The unexpected eruption started fires on the western side of the small Mediterranean island, which lies north of Sicily, off the toe of Italy. Fire crews were being called in from nearby locations and a Canadair plane was already in action.

“We saw the explosion from the hotel. There was a loud roar,” said Michela Favorito, who works in a hotel near Fico Grande, on the east side of the island.

“We plugged our ears and after this a cloud of ash swept over us. The whole sky is full of ash, a fairly large cloud,” she told Reuters.

Smoke rises from a volcano on the Italian island of Stromboli, as seen from a helicopter of the State Police, Stromboli, Italy, in this handout picture released on July 4, 2019. Polizia di Stato/Handout via REUTERS
The sea is seen covered with debris and black pumice after the Stromboli volcano erupted killing one person, in Stromboli, Italy July 4, 2019. REUTERS/Alessio Villari
An aerial still image taken from police helicopter video shows ash and smoke rising after a volcanic eruption, seen over Stromboli, Italy July 3, 2019. Coat of arms graphic added at source. Polizia di Stato/Handout via REUTERS

Fiona Carter, a British tourist on the island of Panarea, some 27 km (17 miles) from Stromboli, heard the blast.

“We turned around to see a mushroom cloud coming from Stromboli. Everyone was in shock. Then red hot lava started running down the mountain towards the little village of Ginostra,” she told Reuters.

“The cloud got bigger, white and gray. It enveloped Ginostra and now the cloud has covered Stromboli entirely. Several boats set off for Stromboli,” she added.

Ash rises after a volcano eruption in Stromboli, Italy, July 3, 2019 in this still image obtained from a social media video. Gernot Werner Gruber via REUTERS
The sea is seen covered with debris and black pumice as emergency services arrive on the island to assess the damage after the Stromboli volcano erupted killing one person, in Stromboli, Italy July 4, 2019. REUTERS/Alessio Villari 
Tourists and emergency service officers are seen on the island after a volcano erupted on Stromboli, Italy July 4, 2019 REUTERS/Alessio Villari
Tourists are seen on the island after a volcano erupted on Stromboli, Italy July 4, 2019 REUTERS/Alessio Villari

Stefano Branca, an expert with the National Institute of Geophysics and Vulcanology (INGV), said there had been a “paroxysmal eruption” on the island, when high-pressure magma explodes from a shallow, underground reservoir.

“These are events of great intensity and quite rare,” he told Reuters.

Tourists often climb to the 924-metre (3,000-foot) summit of the volcano and peer into its crater, with small puffs of molten rock regularly blasted into the sky. It was not clear if anyone was on the crater at the time of the blast.

According to the geology.com website, Stromboli is one of the most active volcanoes on the planet and has been erupting almost continuously since 1932.

The island was the setting for a 1950 movie starring Ingrid Bergman and, with other islands in the Aeolian archipelago, has become a favourite location in recent decades for holiday homes for the rich and famous.

Meanwhile in Hawaii, the Mauna Loa volcano has been hit by at least 50 small earthquakes since October of last year, scientists said on Tuesday, prompting U.S. geologists to raise its alert level to yellow… although an eruption does not appear to be imminent.

And less than a week ago volcanic eruptions in Papua New Guinea (PNG) forced 15,000 villagers in the country’s northeast to flee their homes, aid agencies said on Sunday.

FILE PHOTO – Ash billows from Mount Ulawun during a volcanic eruption, West New Britain, Papua New Guinea June 26, 2019 in this still image taken from social media video. Eroli Tamara via REUTERS

Mount Ulawun on PNG’s northeastern island of New Britain exploded suddenly on Wednesday, shooting an ash column 18 km (11.18 miles) into the air, while nearby Manam erupted on Friday, sending dangerous pyroclastic flows down its slopes.

There were no reported casualties but the eruptions destroyed homes, plantations and wells, leaving villagers without food and water while ash columns disrupted domestic flights.

(Writing by Crispian Balmer; Editing by Hugh Lawson, Frances Kerry and Peter Graff)