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Has the La Palma volcano killed anyone?

The volcano rumbled for 85 days between September and December 2021. The first death from a months-long volcanic eruption on Spain's La Palma island in 2021 has been confirmed after a court ruled Monday that a man died from inhaling toxic gases from the volcano.



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The volcano rumbled for 85 days, ejecting ash and rivers of lava that swallowed more than 1,000 homes, cut off highways and suffocated the lush banana plantations that drive the island's economy. The eruption was declared over on Christmas Day, leaving residents grappling with the daunting task of rebuilding.

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In the area you have selected (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) tsunami hazard is classified as medium according to the information that is currently available. This means that there is more than a 10% chance of a potentially-damaging tsunami occurring in the next 50 years.

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The report claimed that “during a future eruption” the volcano “may experience a catastrophic flank collapse”. The paper suggested that this could create waves capable of transiting “the entire Atlantic Basin and arrive on the coasts of the Americas with 10-25 m (3-8 m) height”.

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After a long time closed to visitors, La Palma has reopened, and there has never been a better time to discover this special island. “The volcano hit us hard,” says Carlos Deniz, “but we are not defeated.

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A mega-tsunami is an extremely rare and destructive phenomenon that strikes the world every few thousand years.

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