Kaië Ryio'qi: Difference between revisions
m (→2014 eruption) |
m (1 revision imported) |
Revision as of 20:37, 28 January 2019
Kaië Ryio'qi | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Elevation | 385 m (1,263 ft) |
Geography | |
Location | Western Azmir, Trellin |
Parent range | Vekra Yarsali |
Geology | |
Mountain type | Stratovolcano |
Last eruption | 6-7 September 2014 |
Kaië Ryio'qi (Trellinese, meaning Ryioi's Fire) is an active stratovolcano in the Trellinese province of Azmir. The most active volcano in the Trellinese Empire, it has erupted several times in modern history. In 1993, two villages were destroyed by lava flows which killed 78 people. This disaster was later eclipsed by an eruption which occurred on 6-7 September 2014, causing lahars which killed eight hundred and sixty three people and generating an ash cloud that reached as far as Haguenau, with the financial toll running into the billions of rasnen and dollars.
Toponymy
Kaië Ryio'qi is a name in Trellinese which literally means "Ryioi's Fire". It is named for Ryioi, the Ethlorek god of the earth, who is said to live deep inside the earth. When the volcano was first discovered by Ethlorek settlers it was still smoking from its eruption in 56 BC.
1993 eruption
2014 eruption
The eruption began on 6 September at about 10:31 a.m. local time (TCT; about 11:31 a.m. (UTC)) when the volcano's cone was suddenly blasted out, sending up a large plume of smoke and pyroclastic debris. Locals and nearby fishermen reported seeing the summit of the volcano seem to fall inwards shortly before the eruption. Seismologists and vulcanologists had been monitoring smoke from nearby Vekh Torsalë, expecting that volcano to erupt, and were surprised by the eruption of Kaië Ryio'qi though they said it had not been ruled out as a possibility.[1]
Between twenty and thirty minutes after the initial eruption, lava began pouring out of vents on the side of the cone, mostly on the landward side. This lava mixed with mud, caused by heavy rain a few days beforehand, to form a deadly lahar which rushed down the slope at speeds of up to 50 km/h. Initial estimates of the death toll quickly climbed to three hundred, with another thousand reported missing as several villages and the town of Marzisa were destroyed by the lahar.[2] Several countries reacted with immediate pledges of aid, including the Aurora Confederacy,[3] Neu Engollon,[4] Nikolia and Woodstead.[5] but rescue efforts were severely hampered by the thick mud and the continued threat of a lahar.
The volcano's ash cloud rose quickly to the altitude of the West Astyrian jet stream, which caught the plume and carried it northeast along the coast. By 4 a.m. (TCT) on 7 September, satellite imagery was showing the cloud as having gone over Mar'theqa and Arimathea and reached Morroseta. By the late afternoon it had already reached New London, capital of the Dangish Empire. As a result, several airports cancelled all flights a number of and airlines were also forced to redirect or cancel flights. Before it finally dissipated, the ash cloud had reached as far as southern Haguenau.
The final death toll, eight hundred and sixty three, makes the eruption the deadliest in modern Trellinese history. More than half of the dead were from the town of Marzisa, where the lahars sat four metres deep. The remainder of the dead were from nearby villages Mret Iqoi, Orik and Txisna, the latter two of which were left almost entirely depopulated as a result of the eruption.[6]
References
- ↑ Lezalm, Esamin, "Volcano erupts in Azmir", The Sidereal Herald, 6 September 2014. Retrieved on 6 September 2014.
- ↑ Lezalm, Esamin, "Azmir's volcano still spewing out ash", The Sidereal Herald, 7 September 2014. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
- ↑ Official press release, Project Aurora, 7 September 2014.
- ↑ Bagotti, Daniel, "Major Volcanic Eruption in Trellin", Telleursville Times, 7 September 2014. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
- ↑ Danvers, Lucille, "Flights grounded? No worries.", The Libettan Spectator, 7 September 2014. Retrieved on 7 September 2014,
- ↑ Lezalm, Esamin, "Kaië Ryio'qi: the immediate aftermath", The Sidereal Herald, 12 September 2014. Retrieved on 12 September 2014.