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2011–2012 Puyehue-Cordón Caulle eruption

The 2011–2012 Puyehue-Cordón Caulle eruption ([puˈʝewe]) was a volcanic eruption that began in the Puyehue-Cordón Caulle volcanic complex in Chile on 4 June 2011. The eruption, which occurred from the Cordón Caulle fissure after 51 years of the volcano being inactive, is one of the largest volcanic eruptions of the 21st century thus far.[2] At least 3,500 people were evacuated from nearby areas,[3] while the ash cloud was blown across cities all around the Southern hemisphere, including Bariloche, Buenos Aires, Montevideo, Stanley, Porto Alegre, Cape Town, Hobart, Perth, Adelaide, Sydney, Melbourne, Wellington, Auckland and Port Moresby, forcing airlines to cancel hundreds of international and domestic flights and causing travel chaos.

2011–2012 Puyehue-Cordón Caulle eruption
2011 eruption of Puyehue-Cordón Caulle
VolcanoPuyehue-Cordón Caulle
Start date4 June 2011 (2011-06-04)[1]
End date21 April 2012 (2012-04-21)[1]
TypePlinian
LocationRanco Province, Chile
40°35′25″S 72°07′02″W / 40.59028°S 72.11722°W / -40.59028; -72.11722
VEI5[1]

By 18 June the ash cloud had completed its first circle of the globe. The Chilean civil aviation authority said that "the tip of the cloud that has travelled around the world has more or less reached the town of Coyhaique", about 600 kilometres south of the Puyehue-Cordón Caulle.[4] An estimated one hundred million tons of ash, sand and pumice were ejected – requiring power equivalent to 70 Hiroshima atomic bombs.[5]

Cordón Caulle is a volcanic fissure and has erupted many times in recorded history, most recently in 1960, following the 1960 Valdivia earthquake days earlier,[6] whereas the Puyehue stratocone has remained dormant.

Eruption edit

 
Puyehue Cordon Caulle erupting vent, February 2012

The Southern Andean Volcano Observatory (OVDAS) of Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería de Chile (SERNAGEOMIN) reported on 27 April 2011, 15:30 local time, an increased seismicity at the Puyehue-Cordón Caulle and set the alert Level to 3, Yellow.[7]

Between 20:00 on 2 June and 19:59 on 3 June, OVDAS reported[8] that about 1,450 earthquakes at Puyehue-Cordón Caulle were detected, or an average of about 60 earthquakes per hour. Scientists and regional authorities flew over the volcano, noting no significant changes. The alert level remained at 3, yellow. Area residents reported feeling earthquakes during the evening of 3 June through the morning of 4 June.

On 4 June, at 11:30 local time, a new round of eruption in the Puyehue volcano began. For a six-hour period on 4 June seismic activity increased to an average of 230 earthquakes per hour, at depths of 1–4 km. About 12 events were magnitudes greater than 4 of Richter magnitude, and 50 events were magnitudes greater than 3. The alert level was raised to 5, red.[9][10]

At 15:15 local time OVDAS reported an explosion and a 5 kilometres (3.1 mi)-wide ash-and-gas plume that rose to an altitude of 10 kilometres (33,000 ft) above sea level. The plume drifted south at 5 kilometres (16,000 ft) altitude, and southeast and east at 10 kilometres (33,000 ft) altitude. The alert level was raised to 6, red.[11]

18 days after it first erupted, lava begun spilling from the volcano, heading west and flowing "slowly by a channel about 50 meters wide and 100 feet long."[12][13]

According to Argentine physicists, the eruption sent one hundred million tons of ash, sand and pumice stone, equivalent to the load of 24 million trucks of sand and released power equivalent to 70 Hiroshima atomic bombs (equal to 1000 kilotons of TNT). The eruption, though violent, is expected to fertilize the land and rivers.[5] Evaluation of the total amount of airborne erupted material has proved to be challenging, with estimated values ranging from 0.5 to 1.5 km3 (0.12 to 0.36 cu mi). A further 0.25 to 0.45 km3 (0.060 to 0.108 cu mi) of lava were erupted in the months following the first explosions.[14]

Evacuation edit

A "red alert" was declared pre-emptively by the National Emergencies' Office (ONEMI) for regions near the volcano: Puyehue, Río Bueno, Futrono, and Lago Ranco; initially 600 persons were evacuated. The "red alert" was later extended for the Los Ríos Region area: the areas of Pocura, Pichico, Los Venados, Contrafuerte, El Zapallo, Futangue, Pitreño, Trahuico, Riñinahue Alto, Ranquil, Chanco, Epulafquén, Las Quemas, Licán, Boqueal, Rucatayo, and Mantilhue were evacuated; and areas in the Los Lagos Region such as El Retiro, Anticura, El Caulle, Forestal Comaco, and Anticura Pajaritos were also evacuated, increasing the number to at least 3,000 total evacuated people.[15] It was reported that, at first, large land- and farm-owners in Chilean rural areas near the volcano did not allow workers to be evacuated.[16] According to Chilean authorities, the evacuated persons "would be relocated in temporary shelters in safe areas." There are no reports of deaths or injuries.

The families who refused to be evacuated from the riverbed of Rio Nilahue were removed by force by the Carabineros de Chile after a resolution of the Appeal Court of Valdivia. It took the police more than 8 hours to evacuate 40 people. People resisted mainly because they had to leave their livestock behind.[17] Small livestock farmers were permitted to check and care for their livestock once a day.[18]

On 17 June 2011 OVDAS reported that the ash-and-gas plume reached 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) above sea level, and the frequency of earthquakes had dropped to 5 per hour. They reduced the alert level from 6 (moderate eruption) to 5 (imminent eruption), and at least 100 evacuated persons were allowed to return home.[19][20] People from the Northeast side of the Cordón (Nilahue and Gol Gol Valley) will stay in the shelters.

On 19 June the ONEMI decided that all 4,200 evacuees could return home, as the scale of the eruption continued to decrease.[21]

Ash cloud over Argentina and Uruguay edit

 
Topography of the region. The Puyehue-Cordón Caulle massif is located between Ranco and Puyehue Lake

The ash cloud crossed Chile's borders and precipitated over the Argentine cities of Villa la Angostura, Bariloche and the northern part of Chubut[22] province.[23][24] The eruption was reported to have produced lightning and strong thunderstorms.[25][26] Argentine Minister of Defense Arturo Puricelli ordered that "the Argentine Army personnel, means of transport, water treatment plants, and other equipment of VI Mountain Brigade in the province of Neuquén" be moved to the affected areas on the Argentine border with Chile.[27]

In Argentina's affected cities, people have been recommended to stay indoors.[28]

On 5 June the ash rain in Bariloche ceased. There were reports that the ash had caused power outages[29] and prompted the local airport to be closed. The Bariloche Atomic Centre reported that the ashes contain no crystal phases of quartz or cristobalite.[30]

On 9 June ash clouds from Puyehue reached Uruguay, forcing most flights to be cancelled.[31] On 11 June the ash clouds reached the southern tip of New Zealand, with unusual sunsets reported in Invercargill.

Further disruption was caused by ash in October 2011, with airports at Mendoza, Bariloche and Buenos Aires closed and flights to Buenos Aires and Montevideo cancelled.[citation needed] This was ash from the earlier eruption which had been deposited across Patagonia and stirred up by high winds.[32] Some areas of Argentina close to the Chilean border still had ash falling almost daily four months after the June eruption.[33]

River temperature and contamination edit

The eruption of the Chilean volcano Puyehue significantly affected the surrounding environment. The temperature of the Nilahue River rose to 45 °C (113 °F) and killed an estimated 4.5 million fish with an economic impact on fish farming in the area. The cattle economy was also damaged.[34][35]

Scientists from the Southern University of Chile analyzed waters from the Nilahue and Golgol rivers, the two principal collectors of waters from Cordón Caulle. Scientists found that if solid particles were removed the water was safe to drink.[36]

Although very little ash was deposited on the western side of the volcano, the ash reached Puyehue Lake through river transport, depositing a layer of tephra at the bottom of the lake.[37]

Livestock edit

The ash cloud led Argentina to declare a state of emergency for farmers as the prolonged eruption's continued effect on the 2 million head of sheep that graze in southern Argentina. Chubut and Río Negro Provinces had suffered five years of drought, and the ash destroyed the little pastureland still serviceable. 750,000 sheep suffered the consequences, and Rio Negro officials said 60,000 head of cattle also were "at risk."[38] The livestock had suffered major heart attacks and many of which contracted throat cancer, resulting in death.

Whereas there appears to be no published support for the existence of heart attacks or throat cancer as a consequence from the exposure to ashes and causing death, there are at least two phenomena which play a role. First, the physical reduction of available forage (on top of the prevailing general drought conditions) has resulted in lack of forage, and therefore, starvation with all its consequences. This was accelerated by the rapid wear of teeth from the abrasive action of ashes, and thus a reduced efficiency to forage. Second, these ashes cause fluoride intoxication in herbivores, with many different symptoms, and confirmed in sheep, cattle and horses.[39]

Wildlife and forests edit

However, besides livestock, also wild species are strongly affected by the ashes. Fluoride intoxication was first discovered in red deer (Cervus elaphus), with pronounced dental fluorosis. The result is formation of abnormal teeth both in physical form as well as in reduced hardness. It reduces foraging efficiency, eliminated pregnancies in subadults, and will reduce longevity by 50–75%.[40] While the rate of fluoride intake exceeds the capacity to eliminate it, animals continue to accumulate fluoride. Before the eruption, fluoride levels in adults was about 50–60 ppm. On average, deer were judged to accumulate about 1,000 ppm per year under similar exposure to ashes, which remains the situation for many drier sites, where the winds constantly redeposit the ashes. Some deer accumulated more like 3,700 ppm per year and reached 5,175 ppm by the year 2012.[41] This trend has remained for some areas as the most recent deer examined had adults which had reached 10,396 ppm.[42] These high levels of fluorosis likely affect the skeleton, and a first case in deer with severe osteological pathology has been described in March 2015.

A study along Chile Route 215 showed that in places with ash falls of 10 cm about 8% of the trees died while at locations with 50 cm of ash 54% of the trees died. Ashes did not cause any significant abrasion of the canopy.[43]

Transport disruption edit

 
The images show the density of particles in the atmosphere (aerosols) as measured by the Ozone Monitoring Instrument on the Aura satellite. The series starts on 5 June 2011, the day after the eruption began, and continues through 13 June.

Ash poses a significant threat to aircraft because once sucked into engines, it can be transformed into molten glass by the high temperatures and potentially cause an engine to fail.

On the ground lava, ash and volcanic stone can impede vehicle movement.

Chile edit

Initially, because of the wind direction (to east), the flights within Chile were not interrupted and only the highway Route 215-CH and the "Cardenal Samore Pass" was reported to be covered by 10 to 15 cm of "volcanic stone" by Chilean authorities.[44] and closed down on 4 June.[45]

The Chilean government increased the frequency of barges on the Pirihueico Lake in Huahum Pass to transport passengers traveling between Chile and Argentina. Huahum Pass is approximately 100 km north of the closed "Cardenal Samore Pass".

On 22 June, as the ash cloud rounded the world and returned to Chile, the Chilean airline LAN cancelled flights to Temuco and Valdivia in the south of the country.[46]

Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil edit

On 4 June at approximately 4:30 pm local time, Neuquén Airport was closed due to the ash cloud.[47] Ash fell across a wide swathe of South America, forcing cancellation of most flights across the southern half of the continent. A planned meeting between the presidents of Argentina and Uruguay was cancelled because José Mujica was unable to fly to Buenos Aires.[48]

South Brazil suffered a lot with flights between Buenos Aires, Montevideo, Santiago, Curitiba, Florianopolis and Porto Alegre cancelled.

Falkland Islands edit

Three Falkland Islands air links with the United Kingdom were merged onto one aircraft. Allocation operated according to a priority system, with passengers ranked in importance. The three highest categories were 1. Travel for medical reasons (as designated by the Director of Health and Education); 2. Students returning to study (as designated by the Director of Health and Education); 3. Business passengers at risk of a serious and unavoidable impact on their business. Passengers were strongly recommended to travel LAN Airlines as the ash cloud did not cover the route over Punta Arenas.[49]

South Africa edit

On 14 June the South African Civil Aviation Authority released a statement saying that the ash cloud was being monitored and that there was no operational impact to the airlines.[50] However, two local airlines, South African Airways and Kulula.com, cancelled some flights to and from Cape Town International Airport and East London Airport on 18 June; operations later resumed.[51][52]

Australia and New Zealand edit

 
MODIS Aqua image of the ash cloud over Tasmania

At its greatest extent, strong winds had carried the ash cloud from Puyehue a great distance at high altitude, and the ash remained present for several days at distinct altitude bands between 20,000–35,000 feet over New Zealand and southern Australia, disrupting flights between Adelaide, Melbourne, Perth, and all of Tasmania and New Zealand.[53][54][55][56][57] Initially Air New Zealand managed to avoid cancellations by flying their aircraft at lower altitudes (20,000 feet) in order to avoid ash, requiring 10% more fuel. Cancellations started by 15 June.[58][59] Subsequently, Rob Fyfe of Air New Zealand hit back at malicious rumours from Australian airlines that continuing to fly was unsafe.[60]

Virgin Australia resumed flights to southern Australia by 13 June, but Qantas and its subsidiary Jetstar did not resume flights until 14 and 15 June because the Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre in Australia did not have the technology to determine the thickness of the plume.[61][62][63] Losses for the airlines are expected to be in the millions.[64]

Flights to and from Perth were disrupted by the approaching plume of ash, extending from 15,000 to 35,000 feet.[65]

On 20 June flights were once again cancelled at Adelaide and Mildura airports.[66] On 21 and 22 June flights to Sydney, Canberra, Melbourne, Newcastle, Wagga Wagga and Albury airports were cancelled due to the ash cloud.[67] As of 22 June 2011 the ash cloud was expected to move from Australia to New Zealand.[68]

Economic and financial impact edit

Macquarie Equities placed the cost of disruptions to airlines at A$21 million for Qantas and $11 million for Virgin Australia.[68] The tourism industry was also impacted, costing Australia $15 million during the two-week period,[69] with CEO John Lee of lobbying group Tourism & Transport Forum stating a daily cost of at least A$10 million as a result of complete closure of Sydney and Melbourne's main airports.[70]

The government of Neuquen province, Argentina, declared an economic emergency as the ash cloud was harming tourism and threatening livestock.[71] The decree by provincial governor Jorge Sapag allowed those affected to claim for tax and other benefits.[71] In Argentina ashes from Puyehue were advertised for sale and some were also used for making handicrafts.[72] The intendant of Villa La Angostura assured that there were plenty of ideas of what to do with the ashes, among them bricks.[72] In addition ashes were used to improve gravel roads around San Carlos de Bariloche.[72]

The president Cristina Fernández announced on national television plans to supply $2.41 billion to 1,400 farmers and businesses in the area affected by the ash cloud. They also plan to spend $7 million on the cleanup operation, and double social benefits, and defer tax payments for the hardest hit regions.[73]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Erupción del Cordón Caulle es similar a la de mayo de 1960
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  16. ^ "Dueños de fundos prohibieron a sus trabajadores evacuar tras erupción volcánica" (in Spanish). Radio Bío Bío. 4 June 2011. from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 5 June 2011.
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  25. ^ La columna de humo del volcán Puyehue alcanza los 10 kilómetros de alto
  26. ^ Dayton, Leigh (7 June 2011). "Chile's Puyehue hosts a rock show not seen since the 60s". The Australian.
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  38. ^ Agriculture emergency is Argentine Patagonia because of the volcanic ash
  39. ^ Flueck WT. 2013. Effects of Fluoride intoxication on teeth of livestock due to a recent volcanic eruption in Patagonia, Argentina. Onl J Vet Res., 17 (4): 167–176. 9 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine
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  41. ^ Flueck WT, Smith-Flueck JM. 2013. Temporal kinetics of fluoride accumulation: from fetal to adult deer. European Journal of Wildlife Research, 59:899–903.
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  43. ^ Federick J., Swanson; Jones, Julia; Crisafilli, Charlie; González, Mauro E.; Lara, Antonio (2016). "Puyehue-Cordón Caulle eruption of 2011: tephra fall and initial forest responses in the Chilean Andes". Bosque. 37 (1): 85–96. doi:10.4067/S0717-92002016000100009.
  44. ^ Erupción de Cordón Caulle: Aún no hay fecha fija para el regreso de los evacuados, Emol
  45. ^ . Lmneuquen.com.ar. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
  46. ^ Puyehue Volcano Expels Lava
  47. ^ "Volcanic Ash from Puyehue Halts Argentina's Air Traffic Again Today". International Business Times. 9 June 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
  48. ^ Google news from Associated Press Volcanic ash dusts Argentine capital, cuts flights
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  50. ^ SACAA. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 September 2011. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
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  64. ^ Williams, Felicity (14 June 2011). "Ash impact likely to cost millions". Perth Now. Retrieved 14 June 2011.
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  66. ^ Heasley, Andrew (20 June 2011). "Ash cloud returns: Virgin, Tiger suspend flights". WAToday. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
  67. ^ Haynes, Rhys (21 June 2011). "Volcanic ash cloud forces Qantas to cancel Wednesday flights, international flights delayed". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
  68. ^ a b "Australian flights resume as Chile volcano ash clears". BBC News. 22 June 2011. from the original on 22 June 2011. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
  69. ^ Taylor, Rob; Perry, Michael (22 June 2011). "Ash cloud clears, Australia flights resume". Reuters. Canberra. from the original on 15 July 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
  70. ^ Daley, Gemma (22 June 2011). "Australia ash clears after flight halt prompts A$2,100 cab ride". Bloomberg. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  71. ^ a b "Chilean Volcano's Cloud of Ash Circles the Globe and Comes Home Again". Fox News Latino. 18 June 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
  72. ^ a b c Las ingeniosas soluciones para deshacerse de las cenizas del cordón Caulle
  73. ^ "Argentina unveils plan to mitigate cost of volcano". AFP. 5 July 2011. Retrieved 2 March 2013.

External links edit

  • Chile's Volcano Erupts: Crazy Skies — slideshow by Life magazine
  • Volcanic Ash and Pumice From Puyehue, slideshow from The Atlantic, 17 June 2011

2011, 2012, puyehue, cordón, caulle, eruption, puˈʝewe, volcanic, eruption, that, began, puyehue, cordón, caulle, volcanic, complex, chile, june, 2011, eruption, which, occurred, from, cordón, caulle, fissure, after, years, volcano, being, inactive, largest, v. The 2011 2012 Puyehue Cordon Caulle eruption puˈʝewe was a volcanic eruption that began in the Puyehue Cordon Caulle volcanic complex in Chile on 4 June 2011 The eruption which occurred from the Cordon Caulle fissure after 51 years of the volcano being inactive is one of the largest volcanic eruptions of the 21st century thus far 2 At least 3 500 people were evacuated from nearby areas 3 while the ash cloud was blown across cities all around the Southern hemisphere including Bariloche Buenos Aires Montevideo Stanley Porto Alegre Cape Town Hobart Perth Adelaide Sydney Melbourne Wellington Auckland and Port Moresby forcing airlines to cancel hundreds of international and domestic flights and causing travel chaos 2011 2012 Puyehue Cordon Caulle eruption2011 eruption of Puyehue Cordon CaulleVolcanoPuyehue Cordon CaulleStart date4 June 2011 2011 06 04 1 End date21 April 2012 2012 04 21 1 TypePlinianLocationRanco Province Chile40 35 25 S 72 07 02 W 40 59028 S 72 11722 W 40 59028 72 11722VEI5 1 By 18 June the ash cloud had completed its first circle of the globe The Chilean civil aviation authority said that the tip of the cloud that has travelled around the world has more or less reached the town of Coyhaique about 600 kilometres south of the Puyehue Cordon Caulle 4 An estimated one hundred million tons of ash sand and pumice were ejected requiring power equivalent to 70 Hiroshima atomic bombs 5 Cordon Caulle is a volcanic fissure and has erupted many times in recorded history most recently in 1960 following the 1960 Valdivia earthquake days earlier 6 whereas the Puyehue stratocone has remained dormant Contents 1 Eruption 1 1 Evacuation 1 2 Ash cloud over Argentina and Uruguay 1 3 River temperature and contamination 1 4 Livestock 1 5 Wildlife and forests 2 Transport disruption 2 1 Chile 2 2 Argentina Uruguay and Brazil 2 3 Falkland Islands 2 4 South Africa 2 5 Australia and New Zealand 3 Economic and financial impact 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEruption edit nbsp Puyehue Cordon Caulle erupting vent February 2012 The Southern Andean Volcano Observatory OVDAS of Servicio Nacional de Geologia y Mineria de Chile SERNAGEOMIN reported on 27 April 2011 15 30 local time an increased seismicity at the Puyehue Cordon Caulle and set the alert Level to 3 Yellow 7 Between 20 00 on 2 June and 19 59 on 3 June OVDAS reported 8 that about 1 450 earthquakes at Puyehue Cordon Caulle were detected or an average of about 60 earthquakes per hour Scientists and regional authorities flew over the volcano noting no significant changes The alert level remained at 3 yellow Area residents reported feeling earthquakes during the evening of 3 June through the morning of 4 June On 4 June at 11 30 local time a new round of eruption in the Puyehue volcano began For a six hour period on 4 June seismic activity increased to an average of 230 earthquakes per hour at depths of 1 4 km About 12 events were magnitudes greater than 4 of Richter magnitude and 50 events were magnitudes greater than 3 The alert level was raised to 5 red 9 10 At 15 15 local time OVDAS reported an explosion and a 5 kilometres 3 1 mi wide ash and gas plume that rose to an altitude of 10 kilometres 33 000 ft above sea level The plume drifted south at 5 kilometres 16 000 ft altitude and southeast and east at 10 kilometres 33 000 ft altitude The alert level was raised to 6 red 11 18 days after it first erupted lava begun spilling from the volcano heading west and flowing slowly by a channel about 50 meters wide and 100 feet long 12 13 According to Argentine physicists the eruption sent one hundred million tons of ash sand and pumice stone equivalent to the load of 24 million trucks of sand and released power equivalent to 70 Hiroshima atomic bombs equal to 1000 kilotons of TNT The eruption though violent is expected to fertilize the land and rivers 5 Evaluation of the total amount of airborne erupted material has proved to be challenging with estimated values ranging from 0 5 to 1 5 km3 0 12 to 0 36 cu mi A further 0 25 to 0 45 km3 0 060 to 0 108 cu mi of lava were erupted in the months following the first explosions 14 Evacuation edit A red alert was declared pre emptively by the National Emergencies Office ONEMI for regions near the volcano Puyehue Rio Bueno Futrono and Lago Ranco initially 600 persons were evacuated The red alert was later extended for the Los Rios Region area the areas of Pocura Pichico Los Venados Contrafuerte El Zapallo Futangue Pitreno Trahuico Rininahue Alto Ranquil Chanco Epulafquen Las Quemas Lican Boqueal Rucatayo and Mantilhue were evacuated and areas in the Los Lagos Region such as El Retiro Anticura El Caulle Forestal Comaco and Anticura Pajaritos were also evacuated increasing the number to at least 3 000 total evacuated people 15 It was reported that at first large land and farm owners in Chilean rural areas near the volcano did not allow workers to be evacuated 16 According to Chilean authorities the evacuated persons would be relocated in temporary shelters in safe areas There are no reports of deaths or injuries The families who refused to be evacuated from the riverbed of Rio Nilahue were removed by force by the Carabineros de Chile after a resolution of the Appeal Court of Valdivia It took the police more than 8 hours to evacuate 40 people People resisted mainly because they had to leave their livestock behind 17 Small livestock farmers were permitted to check and care for their livestock once a day 18 On 17 June 2011 OVDAS reported that the ash and gas plume reached 3 kilometres 1 9 mi above sea level and the frequency of earthquakes had dropped to 5 per hour They reduced the alert level from 6 moderate eruption to 5 imminent eruption and at least 100 evacuated persons were allowed to return home 19 20 People from the Northeast side of the Cordon Nilahue and Gol Gol Valley will stay in the shelters On 19 June the ONEMI decided that all 4 200 evacuees could return home as the scale of the eruption continued to decrease 21 Ash cloud over Argentina and Uruguay edit nbsp Topography of the region The Puyehue Cordon Caulle massif is located between Ranco and Puyehue Lake The ash cloud crossed Chile s borders and precipitated over the Argentine cities of Villa la Angostura Bariloche and the northern part of Chubut 22 province 23 24 The eruption was reported to have produced lightning and strong thunderstorms 25 26 Argentine Minister of Defense Arturo Puricelli ordered that the Argentine Army personnel means of transport water treatment plants and other equipment of VI Mountain Brigade in the province of Neuquen be moved to the affected areas on the Argentine border with Chile 27 In Argentina s affected cities people have been recommended to stay indoors 28 On 5 June the ash rain in Bariloche ceased There were reports that the ash had caused power outages 29 and prompted the local airport to be closed The Bariloche Atomic Centre reported that the ashes contain no crystal phases of quartz or cristobalite 30 On 9 June ash clouds from Puyehue reached Uruguay forcing most flights to be cancelled 31 On 11 June the ash clouds reached the southern tip of New Zealand with unusual sunsets reported in Invercargill Further disruption was caused by ash in October 2011 with airports at Mendoza Bariloche and Buenos Aires closed and flights to Buenos Aires and Montevideo cancelled citation needed This was ash from the earlier eruption which had been deposited across Patagonia and stirred up by high winds 32 Some areas of Argentina close to the Chilean border still had ash falling almost daily four months after the June eruption 33 nbsp Image from NASA s Aqua satellite showing the heavy ash cloud on 4 June 2011 nbsp Image showing a large plume of volcanic ash blowing about 800 kilometers east and then northeast over Argentina nbsp Airborne image of ash cloud on 5 June 2011 River temperature and contamination edit The eruption of the Chilean volcano Puyehue significantly affected the surrounding environment The temperature of the Nilahue River rose to 45 C 113 F and killed an estimated 4 5 million fish with an economic impact on fish farming in the area The cattle economy was also damaged 34 35 Scientists from the Southern University of Chile analyzed waters from the Nilahue and Golgol rivers the two principal collectors of waters from Cordon Caulle Scientists found that if solid particles were removed the water was safe to drink 36 Although very little ash was deposited on the western side of the volcano the ash reached Puyehue Lake through river transport depositing a layer of tephra at the bottom of the lake 37 Livestock edit The ash cloud led Argentina to declare a state of emergency for farmers as the prolonged eruption s continued effect on the 2 million head of sheep that graze in southern Argentina Chubut and Rio Negro Provinces had suffered five years of drought and the ash destroyed the little pastureland still serviceable 750 000 sheep suffered the consequences and Rio Negro officials said 60 000 head of cattle also were at risk 38 The livestock had suffered major heart attacks and many of which contracted throat cancer resulting in death Whereas there appears to be no published support for the existence of heart attacks or throat cancer as a consequence from the exposure to ashes and causing death there are at least two phenomena which play a role First the physical reduction of available forage on top of the prevailing general drought conditions has resulted in lack of forage and therefore starvation with all its consequences This was accelerated by the rapid wear of teeth from the abrasive action of ashes and thus a reduced efficiency to forage Second these ashes cause fluoride intoxication in herbivores with many different symptoms and confirmed in sheep cattle and horses 39 Wildlife and forests edit However besides livestock also wild species are strongly affected by the ashes Fluoride intoxication was first discovered in red deer Cervus elaphus with pronounced dental fluorosis The result is formation of abnormal teeth both in physical form as well as in reduced hardness It reduces foraging efficiency eliminated pregnancies in subadults and will reduce longevity by 50 75 40 While the rate of fluoride intake exceeds the capacity to eliminate it animals continue to accumulate fluoride Before the eruption fluoride levels in adults was about 50 60 ppm On average deer were judged to accumulate about 1 000 ppm per year under similar exposure to ashes which remains the situation for many drier sites where the winds constantly redeposit the ashes Some deer accumulated more like 3 700 ppm per year and reached 5 175 ppm by the year 2012 41 This trend has remained for some areas as the most recent deer examined had adults which had reached 10 396 ppm 42 These high levels of fluorosis likely affect the skeleton and a first case in deer with severe osteological pathology has been described in March 2015 A study along Chile Route 215 showed that in places with ash falls of 10 cm about 8 of the trees died while at locations with 50 cm of ash 54 of the trees died Ashes did not cause any significant abrasion of the canopy 43 Transport disruption edit nbsp The images show the density of particles in the atmosphere aerosols as measured by the Ozone Monitoring Instrument on the Aura satellite The series starts on 5 June 2011 the day after the eruption began and continues through 13 June Ash poses a significant threat to aircraft because once sucked into engines it can be transformed into molten glass by the high temperatures and potentially cause an engine to fail On the ground lava ash and volcanic stone can impede vehicle movement Chile edit Initially because of the wind direction to east the flights within Chile were not interrupted and only the highway Route 215 CH and the Cardenal Samore Pass was reported to be covered by 10 to 15 cm of volcanic stone by Chilean authorities 44 and closed down on 4 June 45 The Chilean government increased the frequency of barges on the Pirihueico Lake in Huahum Pass to transport passengers traveling between Chile and Argentina Huahum Pass is approximately 100 km north of the closed Cardenal Samore Pass On 22 June as the ash cloud rounded the world and returned to Chile the Chilean airline LAN cancelled flights to Temuco and Valdivia in the south of the country 46 Argentina Uruguay and Brazil edit On 4 June at approximately 4 30 pm local time Neuquen Airport was closed due to the ash cloud 47 Ash fell across a wide swathe of South America forcing cancellation of most flights across the southern half of the continent A planned meeting between the presidents of Argentina and Uruguay was cancelled because Jose Mujica was unable to fly to Buenos Aires 48 South Brazil suffered a lot with flights between Buenos Aires Montevideo Santiago Curitiba Florianopolis and Porto Alegre cancelled Falkland Islands edit Three Falkland Islands air links with the United Kingdom were merged onto one aircraft Allocation operated according to a priority system with passengers ranked in importance The three highest categories were 1 Travel for medical reasons as designated by the Director of Health and Education 2 Students returning to study as designated by the Director of Health and Education 3 Business passengers at risk of a serious and unavoidable impact on their business Passengers were strongly recommended to travel LAN Airlines as the ash cloud did not cover the route over Punta Arenas 49 South Africa edit On 14 June the South African Civil Aviation Authority released a statement saying that the ash cloud was being monitored and that there was no operational impact to the airlines 50 However two local airlines South African Airways and Kulula com cancelled some flights to and from Cape Town International Airport and East London Airport on 18 June operations later resumed 51 52 Australia and New Zealand edit nbsp MODIS Aqua image of the ash cloud over Tasmania At its greatest extent strong winds had carried the ash cloud from Puyehue a great distance at high altitude and the ash remained present for several days at distinct altitude bands between 20 000 35 000 feet over New Zealand and southern Australia disrupting flights between Adelaide Melbourne Perth and all of Tasmania and New Zealand 53 54 55 56 57 Initially Air New Zealand managed to avoid cancellations by flying their aircraft at lower altitudes 20 000 feet in order to avoid ash requiring 10 more fuel Cancellations started by 15 June 58 59 Subsequently Rob Fyfe of Air New Zealand hit back at malicious rumours from Australian airlines that continuing to fly was unsafe 60 Virgin Australia resumed flights to southern Australia by 13 June but Qantas and its subsidiary Jetstar did not resume flights until 14 and 15 June because the Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre in Australia did not have the technology to determine the thickness of the plume 61 62 63 Losses for the airlines are expected to be in the millions 64 Flights to and from Perth were disrupted by the approaching plume of ash extending from 15 000 to 35 000 feet 65 On 20 June flights were once again cancelled at Adelaide and Mildura airports 66 On 21 and 22 June flights to Sydney Canberra Melbourne Newcastle Wagga Wagga and Albury airports were cancelled due to the ash cloud 67 As of 22 June 2011 update the ash cloud was expected to move from Australia to New Zealand 68 Economic and financial impact editMacquarie Equities placed the cost of disruptions to airlines at A 21 million for Qantas and 11 million for Virgin Australia 68 The tourism industry was also impacted costing Australia 15 million during the two week period 69 with CEO John Lee of lobbying group Tourism amp Transport Forum stating a daily cost of at least A 10 million as a result of complete closure of Sydney and Melbourne s main airports 70 The government of Neuquen province Argentina declared an economic emergency as the ash cloud was harming tourism and threatening livestock 71 The decree by provincial governor Jorge Sapag allowed those affected to claim for tax and other benefits 71 In Argentina ashes from Puyehue were advertised for sale and some were also used for making handicrafts 72 The intendant of Villa La Angostura assured that there were plenty of ideas of what to do with the ashes among them bricks 72 In addition ashes were used to improve gravel roads around San Carlos de Bariloche 72 The president Cristina Fernandez announced on national television plans to supply 2 41 billion to 1 400 farmers and businesses in the area affected by the ash cloud They also plan to spend 7 million on the cleanup operation and double social benefits and defer tax payments for the hardest hit regions 73 See also editList of volcanoes in Chile Volcanism of ChileReferences edit a b c Puyehue Cordon Caulle Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 23 January 2020 Erupcion del Cordon Caulle es similar a la de mayo de 1960 Volcan Puyehue Gobierno evacua a 3 500 personas Archived 6 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine La Nacion 4 June 2011 in Spanish Chilean ash makes its way home The Sydney Morning Herald 18 June 2011 Retrieved 21 June 2011 a b Chile s Puyehue Volcano eruption equals 70 atomic bombs Buenos Aires Herald 14 July 2011 Archived from the original on 5 November 2017 Retrieved 14 July 2011 Chile Puyehue volcano chain erupts forcing evacuation BBC Online 5 June 2011 Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Reporte Especial No 13 de Actividad Volcanica Archived 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Reporte Especial de Actividad Volcanica No 26 Archived 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Reporte Especial de Actividad Volcanica No 27 Archived 27 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Guzman Gerson 4 June 2011 Comienza proceso eruptivo en el volcan Puyehue in Spanish Radio Bio Bio Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 4 June 2011 Reporte Especial de Actividad Volcanica No 28 Archived 27 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Puyehue volcano began to fire lava Archived 4 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine on 23 June 2011 Reporte Especial de Actividad Volcanica No 48 Archived 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bertrand Sebastien Daga Romina Bedert Robin Fontjin Karen 6 November 2014 Deposition of the 2011 2012 Cordon Caulle tephra Chile 40 S in lake sediments Implications for tephrochronology and volcanology Journal of Geophysical Research 119 12 2555 2573 Bibcode 2014JGRF 119 2555B doi 10 1002 2014JF003321 hdl 11336 180546 S2CID 134154972 Retrieved 21 January 2022 Complejo Puyehue Cordon Caulle entro en fase eruptiva Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine ONEMI 4 June 2011 La responsabilidad de la conduccion nacional de la Proteccion Civil en Chile corresponde al Ministerio del Interior la que ejerce mediante su servicio especializado ONEMI Access date 4 June 2011 Duenos de fundos prohibieron a sus trabajadores evacuar tras erupcion volcanica in Spanish Radio Bio Bio 4 June 2011 Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Tele 13 Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine on 10 June 2011 Life in the shelter evacuees from Volcan Puyehue try to regain normality Archived 13 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Article Sernageomin baja nivel de alerta volcanica y al menos 100 evacuados pueden retornar in newspaper La Tercera on 17 June 2011 retrieved on 18 June 2011 in Spanish Article Volcan Puyehue Algunos evacuados regresaran a sus casas in Spanish Article 4 200 evacuated people may return home Archived 22 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine in earthquake report com on 19 June 2011 retrieved on 19 June 2011 Las cenizas del Puyehue invaden Chubut in Spanish El Diario 24 Tucuman Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Evacuan a 3 500 personas por la erupcion del volcan Puyehue en Chile Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Infobae com 04 06 11 access date 4 June 2011 Aumentan a 3500 los evacuados por actividad volcanica en Puyehue Cordon Caulle Archived 8 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine La columna de humo del volcan Puyehue alcanza los 10 kilometros de alto Dayton Leigh 7 June 2011 Chile s Puyehue hosts a rock show not seen since the 60s The Australian Movilizan al Ejercito por la erupcion del volcan Puyehue in Spanish Reporte Platense Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 No hubo en Bariloche nueva lluvia de cenizas pero se mantiene el alerta Agencia de Noticias lisher 6 June 2011 Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 6 June 2011 La CEB informa sobre cortes de luz causados por la lluvia de cenizas in Spanish 5 June 2011 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Ceso la caida de cenizas en Bariloche pero se mantiene la emergencia La Nacion 5 June 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Nube de cenizas del cordon Caulle alcanza Uruguay y obliga a cancelar vuelos Argentina Uruguay flights resume after volcanic ash delays seattletimes nwsource com 17 October 2011 Retrieved 23 October 2011 Hernandez Vladimir 4 October 2011 Puyehue volcano ash still clouds life in Argentina BBC Retrieved 23 October 2011 El Caulle erupcion sube a 45 C temperatura del rio Nilahue y autoridad monitorea riesgos La Tercera Chile in Spanish 9 June 2011 Archived from the original on 15 June 2011 Retrieved 10 June 2011 Article Puyehue disrupts air traffic Archived 6 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine on 10 June 2011 retrieved on 10 June 2011 Estudio sostiene que rios del Cordon Caulle no estan contaminados y son potables La Tercera Bertrand et al 2014 Deposition of the 2011 2012 Cordon Caulle tephra Chile 40 S in lake sediments Implications for tephrochronology and volcanology Journal of Geophysical Research Earth Surface Agriculture emergency is Argentine Patagonia because of the volcanic ash Flueck WT 2013 Effects of Fluoride intoxication on teeth of livestock due to a recent volcanic eruption in Patagonia Argentina Onl J Vet Res 17 4 167 176 Archived 9 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine Flueck WT Smith Flueck JM 2013 Severe dental fluorosis in juvenile deer linked to a recent volcanic eruption in Patagonia Journal of Wildlife Diseases 49 2 355 366 Flueck WT Smith Flueck JM 2013 Temporal kinetics of fluoride accumulation from fetal to adult deer European Journal of Wildlife Research 59 899 903 Flueck W T 2014 Continuing impacts on red deer from a volcanic eruption in 2011 European Journal of Wildlife Research 60 699 702 Federick J Swanson Jones Julia Crisafilli Charlie Gonzalez Mauro E Lara Antonio 2016 Puyehue Cordon Caulle eruption of 2011 tephra fall and initial forest responses in the Chilean Andes Bosque 37 1 85 96 doi 10 4067 S0717 92002016000100009 Erupcion de Cordon Caulle Aun no hay fecha fija para el regreso de los evacuados Emol Cierran el Paso internacional Cardenal Samore Diario La Manana Neuquen Lmneuquen com ar Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 4 September 2013 Puyehue Volcano Expels Lava Volcanic Ash from Puyehue Halts Argentina s Air Traffic Again Today International Business Times 9 June 2011 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Google news from Associated Press Volcanic ash dusts Argentine capital cuts flights Article Falklands rations seats on the UK airbridge forced by the volcanic ash in Mercopress on 10 June 2011 retrieved on 15 June 2011 SACAA SACAA and ATNS monitors volcanic ash situation PDF Archived from the original PDF on 29 September 2011 Retrieved 19 June 2011 SouthAfrica to SAA volcanic ash flight cancellations Retrieved 19 June 2011 SA flights delayed by Chile volcanic ash cloud Mail amp Guardian Online SAPA 19 June 2011 Retrieved 19 June 2011 Cox Nicole 11 June 2011 Volcanic ash won t affect flights Perth Now Retrieved 17 June 2011 Ash cloud forces flight cancellations Sky News 11 June 2011 Retrieved 17 June 2011 Critchlow Andrew Craymer Lucy 11 June 2011 Ash Disrupts Flights in Australia New Zealand The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 12 June 2011 More flights cancelled in exceptional ash event ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 12 June 2011 Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 12 June 2011 Staff 13 June 2011 Qantas Jetstar Tiger and Virgin ground flights at Melbourne Airport Australian Associated Press Retrieved 13 June 2011 Volcanic ash halts New Zealand flights BBC News 12 June 2011 Retrieved 13 June 2011 Chile volcanic ash cloud moves higher Stuff 13 June 2011 Retrieved 1 September 2011 Air New Zealand hits back at malicious rumours Stuff 22 June 2011 Retrieved 1 September 2011 Travel misery as ash grounds Australia NZ flights The West Australian Agence France Presse 13 June 2011 Retrieved 7 August 2011 Calligeros Marissa 13 June 2011 Ash cloud airline cancellations ultra conservative Brisbane Times Retrieved 13 June 2011 Virgin flies but Qantas waits amid ash chaos 774 ABC Melbourne Australian Broadcasting Corporation 13 June 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2011 Williams Felicity 14 June 2011 Ash impact likely to cost millions Perth Now Retrieved 14 June 2011 Ash plume stops Perth flights The Sydney Morning Herald Australian Associated Press 15 June 2011 Retrieved 17 June 2011 Heasley Andrew 20 June 2011 Ash cloud returns Virgin Tiger suspend flights WAToday Retrieved 20 June 2011 Haynes Rhys 21 June 2011 Volcanic ash cloud forces Qantas to cancel Wednesday flights international flights delayed The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 21 June 2011 a b Australian flights resume as Chile volcano ash clears BBC News 22 June 2011 Archived from the original on 22 June 2011 Retrieved 22 June 2011 Taylor Rob Perry Michael 22 June 2011 Ash cloud clears Australia flights resume Reuters Canberra Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Retrieved 23 June 2011 Daley Gemma 22 June 2011 Australia ash clears after flight halt prompts A 2 100 cab ride Bloomberg Retrieved 24 June 2011 a b Chilean Volcano s Cloud of Ash Circles the Globe and Comes Home Again Fox News Latino 18 June 2011 Retrieved 23 June 2011 a b c Las ingeniosas soluciones para deshacerse de las cenizas del cordon Caulle Argentina unveils plan to mitigate cost of volcano AFP 5 July 2011 Retrieved 2 March 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2011 Puyehue Cordon Caulle eruption OVDAS reports Chile s Volcano Erupts Crazy Skies slideshow by Life magazine Volcanic Ash and Pumice From Puyehue slideshow from The Atlantic 17 June 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2011 2012 Puyehue Cordon Caulle eruption amp oldid 1183974589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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