Thousands flee their homes and flights are grounded as Chilean volcano sends plumes of ash showering down The Chilean volcano which erupted on Monday has sent a towering plume of ash across South America, forcing thousands from their homes, grounding airline flights in southern Argentina and coating ski resorts with a gritty layer of dust instead of snow. Booming explosions echoed across the Andes as toxic gases belched up from a three-mile-long fissure in the Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcanic complex - a ridge between two craters just west of the Chilean-Argentine border that began erupting Saturday. Winds blew a six-mile high cloud of ash all the way to the Atlantic Ocean and even into southern Buenos Aires province, hundreds of miles to the north-east. Engulfed in ash: A policeman walks between rocks and ash near the volcano site in southern Chile Massive: An example of a pumice rock from Chile's Puyehue-Cordon Caulle chain volcano is displayed Local media said the smell of sulphur hung in the air and there was constant seismic activity. As a precaution, the government said it was evacuating 3,500 people from the surrounding area. As a precaution, the government said it was evacuating 3,500 people from the surrounding area. The ash also swelled a nearby river and ravaged a nearby town of the same name. A woman wipes a thick layer of volcanic ash away from the windscreen of her car. |
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