Only 77 people have ever died due to Mount Etnas eruptions, such as the 9 tourists who died due to small sudden vent clearance which showered them with ash, lava ect. Mount Etna is a slow flowing volcano which usually allows people time to evacuate.
210,001,233
The current Kīlauea eruption began on January 3, 1983 and still continues.
An example of a "quiet" eruption would be the 1983-present eruption of Kilauea in Hawaii. A violent eruption would be the 1980 eruption of Mount St Helens.
You wouldn't expect this but no one died :P
Currently that title goes to Kilauea in Hawaii, which has been erupting almost continuously since 1983. The last volcano to initiate an eruption was Mount Pavlof on the Alaska Peninsula, which produced a small eruption in June 2014.
210,001,233
no
about 900 people and 3 monkeys! (just kidding, it was 2 monkeys) haha
The current Kīlauea eruption began on January 3, 1983 and still continues.
An example of a "quiet" eruption would be the 1983-present eruption of Kilauea in Hawaii. A violent eruption would be the 1980 eruption of Mount St Helens.
You wouldn't expect this but no one died :P
Currently that title goes to Kilauea in Hawaii, which has been erupting almost continuously since 1983. The last volcano to initiate an eruption was Mount Pavlof on the Alaska Peninsula, which produced a small eruption in June 2014.
The dates of Mount Etna's two most recent eruptions was 1991 and 1983. Before that eruption occurred in 1949, 1971, and 1981.
Kilauea has been in a continuous eruption since 1983. See Sources and related links for more information.Kilauea has been in a continuous eruption since 1983. See Sources and related links for more information.
Yes. Mount Kilauea started erupting in 1983 and now, 30 years later, the same eruption is still continuing and showing no sign of stopping.
Kilauea's last eruption is still its current eruption. The volcano awoke from a short slumber on January 3rd of 1983 and has been erupting continuously since that time. The volcano has gone through several different eruptive phases which can be read about on the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory website provided through the United States Geological Survey.
January 3rd, 1983 (continuous)