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| Headlines Vol. 3 Issue No. 34 | September 1-15, 2007 |
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North East News Agency The
authorities in Arunachal Pradesh have sounded an alert after lava and hot
gas clouds began erupting from the side of a hill, officials said on
Tuesday. A government spokesman said a rare geological occurrence was
reported from a hill slope near Kimin village, about 75 km north of state
capital Itanagar. “Residents first witnessed a fire in the hill and
afterwards it began spewing ash and sending debris down its slopes that
appears like typical molten magma of a volcano,” Bidol Tayeng, district
magistrate of Papum Pare said. The
phenomenon was first reported August 21 from the area where there was no
human habitation. The nearest human settlement is located about a
kilometre from the hill slope. “The debris found in the area was of different colours like black, green and brown. Some of the substances also appear like glass, besides burnt bricks and rocks,” the magistrate said. “Such was the intensity of the heat from the flying debris that a high tension power pole near the site of the occurrence melted, resulting in power disruption.” Residents in
the area are panicking, with authorities sealing the area by deploying
police and preventing people from going near the hill. “The site is
lying dormant but not extinct, as the area continues to emit smoke and gas
and also the nearby earth was found to be very hot,” said N. Nyori, a
local administrator in Kimin. Experts from
the Geological Survey of India (GSI) have visited the area and collected
samples for laboratory tests at their headquarters in Kolkata. “This is
some sort of a fumerolic activity which could be the beginning of some
activity inside the earth. The molten magma has probably oozed out owing
to rise in temperature of at least 1,000 degrees centigrade,” a GSI
scientist said requesting not to be named. The laboratory test report is
expected by the weekend. India’s northeastern region is considered by
seismologists to be the sixth most quake prone belt in the world with
Arunachal Pradesh - bordering China and Myanmar - listed in the seismic
zone V category. “Evidence
of volcanic eruptions some millions of years back has been found in a
village named Lichi, about 15 km from the present eruption site. Arunachal | North East Enquirer (Headlines) | Nena Home Page | |
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