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Tuesday, April 23, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Rumbling New Zealand Volcano Delays Recovery of Bodies

A New Zealand island volcano vented more steam and mud Wednesday, prompting authorities to delay plans to recover the bodies of victims from a deadly Monday eruption.

WHAKATANE, New Zealand (AP) — A New Zealand island volcano vented more steam and mud Wednesday, prompting authorities to delay plans to recover the bodies of victims from a deadly Monday eruption.

Volcanic tremors on White Island were intensifying to a level not seen since an eruption in 2016, the GeoNet seismic monitoring agency said Wednesday, calculating a 40% to 60% chance of another eruption within the next 24 hours.

Australia was sending a military plane to bring some of the Australians injured in the eruption to Australia for medical care. Authorities expect to transport 10 injured patients to New South Wales and Victoria states, beginning Thursday.

Six deaths have been confirmed in Monday's eruption, which sent a tower of steam and ash more than 2 miles into the air. The bodies of eight other people are believed to remain on the ash-covered island. Thirty people remain hospitalized, including 25 in critical condition. Many suffered severe burns and are being treated at hospital burn units around New Zealand.

GeoNet said in an early evening update that shallow magma in the volcano appeared to be driving the increased activity. It said there was little risk to the mainland. The volcano is about 30 miles off New Zealand's main North Island.

Police believe 47 visitors were on the island when it erupted, 24 of them Australian, nine Americans, five New Zealanders and others from Germany, Britain, China and Malaysia. Many were passengers aboard the Royal Caribbean cruise ship Ovation of the Seas.

Survivors ran into the sea to escape the scalding steam and ash and emerged covered in burns, said those who helped them. Geoff Hopkins watched the eruption from a boat after visiting the island and told the New Zealand Herald the eruption quickly turned menacing.

He said that injured people transported on their boat were horrifically burned on their exposed skin and even under their clothes.

The first confirmed death was of a local man, Hayden Marshall-Inman, a guide who had shown tourists around the island. Former Whakatane Mayor Tony Bonne said Marshall-Inman was a keen fisherman and well-liked.

In the town touted as the gateway to White Island, the volcano has an almost mystical significance, its regular puffing a feature of the landscape. Whether the island, also known by its Maori name Whakaari, will ever host tourists again remains uncertain.

Many people were questioning why tourists were allowed to visit the island after seismic monitoring experts raised the volcano’s alert level last month.

The island had been mined for sulfur until a 1914 accident in which at least 10 people were killed, and a landslide destroyed the miners’ village and the mine itself. The island became a private scenic reserve in 1953.

Daily tours allow more than 10,000 people to visit every year.

Categories / Environment, International

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