

The 2,640-metre (8,070-foot) Mayon, located about 330 kilometers
southwest of Manila, is a draw for local and foreign tourists but an enduring
danger for anyone getting too close.

Mostly women, children and the elderly carrying bags of clothes were hauled out of farming villages near Mayon volcano’s slopes on board army trucks and minibuses.

The volcano’s world-renowned perfect cone appeared to have
been deformed, swollen with lava that had risen from the Earth’s core.
Before dawn yesterday, Mayon’s crater glowed red as molten rocks
flowed as far as halfway down its slopes.
The deadliest and most powerful of the roughly 20 typhoons that batter the Philippines every year happen towards the end of the year, bringing floods, landslides and storm surges to eastern provinces such as Albay that face the Pacific Ocean.

The deadliest and most powerful of the roughly 20 typhoons that batter the Philippines every year happen towards the end of the year, bringing floods, landslides and storm surges to eastern provinces such as Albay that face the Pacific Ocean.
Source: AFP.
Post a Comment