On Saturday March 26, 2022, the Taal volcano, which is one of the most active in the Philippines, woke up projecting a huge plume of ash and vapor into the atmosphere.
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[EN VIDÉO] Geology of volcanic systems – an invitation to travel Interviews dating from 2009 with Georges Boudon, physicist at the IPGP, and members of the team studying the functioning of volcanoes, from the generation of magmas to eruptions. The vocation of IPGP films is to open the doors of laboratories and to accompany scientists in the world of geosciences. This film is part of a series of 14 short format films which are an invitation to travel from the cosmos to the center of the Earth. Design & production: Medi@terre, IPGP – 2009
Located about sixty kilometers south of Manila, the country’s capital, the Taal volcano is in the form of a large caldera partly occupied by a lake of the same name. In the center is a cone volcanic forming an island, whose crater is itself occupied by a small lake.
The Taal Volcano is located on the famous belt of fire of the Pacific. It is an arc volcanism, linked to a subduction zone, which borders the Philippines. This geological context makes it a particularly active volcano, explosive type. The presence of water at the mouths eruptive indeed leads to violent phreato-magmatic explosionswhich project large amounts of ash and gas in the form of a plume stretching up to very high altitude. Its violent eruptions are frequently associated with fiery clouds and tsunamis. Its location in a highly populated area makes it the deadliest volcano in the country.
Thousands of people evacuated as a precaution
Faced with this risk, the Philippine authorities evacuated several thousand people as a preventive measure, from the first manifestations of the eruption this Saturday. The area located within a radius of 7 km around the volcano is indeed considered very dangerous in the event of an eruption. More than 12,000 people would thus live in vulnerable areas.
The start of the eruption was marked by a plume 1,500 meters high, raining ash over the entire region. The scientific authorities in charge of monitoring the volcano claim that the emissions of ash and gas quickly ceased after this initial explosion, but many earthquakes continue to be recorded, suggesting that a second eruptive phase could occur.
The last eruption dates back to January 2020. The height of the plume had then reached 15 km high and fountains of wash sprang from the volcano. The ashfall had forced tens of thousands of people to temporarily flee the area.
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