Volcano watchers will get the opportunity to observe Russia's Far Eastern volcanoes in action online from September, RIA Novosti news agency quoted Yury Demyanchuk, the head of the Klyuchevskaya seismological volcano station, as saying. Two high-resolution cameras will be installed to monitor the eruptions of the Kluchevskoy, Bezymyanny and Shiveluch volcanoes on the Kamchatka Peninsula. The images will be updated every minute, Demyanchuk said.
Shiveluch Volcano is Erupting in Kamchatka According to the short-term forecast of the Ministry of Emergency of the Kamchatka Territory it may rain and sleet from April 17 to April 23 in Kamchatka, RIA Sever DV informs www.severdv.ru.
The Kamchatka volcano Shiveluch located in the north of the peninsula intensifies its activity and threatens with new heavy eruption. According to RIA Sever DV, lately the volcano Shiveluch activity has increased and a heavy eruption is supposed to occur; it is supposed to be as heavy as the eruption in 2005, when the burning hot lava stream about a kilometre wide and 25 kilometres long erupted from Shiveluch and rushed down its slopes burning everything on its way.
This image of the 3,283 meter high Shiveluch volcano was taken by the Expedition 15 Crew on July 10, 2007. A volcanic plume can be seen on the northern side of the volcano.
According to the local Russian geophysics service, Shiveluch volcano on Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula has emitted a cloud of ash to the height of 6,000 meters, with volcanic ash spreading out to a distance of 90 km southeast of the volcano. Over 170 minor tremors have been registered round Mount Shiveluch in the past twenty-four hours. The 3,283 meters high Shiveluch volcano is the northernmost volcano on the Kamchatka Peninsula.
NASAs Terra satellite caught the Shiveluch and Klyuchevskaya Volcanoes both erupting simultaneously, on April 26, 2007. Shiveluch (Sheveluch) and Klyuchevskaya (Klyuchevskoy or Kliuchevskoi) are both stratovolcanoes on Russias Kamchatka Peninsula
On March 29, 2007, the Sheveluch (Shiveluch) Volcano on the Russian Federations Kamchatka Peninsula erupted. According to the Alaska Volcano Observatory the volcano underwent an explosive eruption between 01:50 and 2:30 UTC, sending an ash cloud skyward roughly 9,750 metres, based on visual estimates.
The largest gas and ash emission in five years from Mount Shiveluch, began at 3 p.m. local time (6 a.m. Moscow time, 2 a.m. GMT) at an altitude of 6 kilometres or 9 kilometres above sea level. Clouds of volcanic ash are spreading to the northeast of Kamchatka's northernmost volcano with an altitude of 3,283 meters, posing a threat to people's health and air flights. Volcanic tremors are being registered in the nearby area.
Mount Shevutich, a volcano on the Russian far-eastern Kamchatka Peninsula, is spewing gas and ash to heights of up to 5,000 feet. Satellite images show clear signs of a thermal anomaly in the area. Residents nearby might face ashfall and mud slides from the slope of Mt. Shiveluch.
Air traffic in the vicinity might also be endangered.
No seismic monitoring is currently being conducted at Mt. Shiveluch because a February eruption of the volcano destroyed a research base and a monitoring station. The last eruption on February 27 destroyed the western part of Mt. Shiveluch's crater. An ash cloud about 150 kilometres wide spread over 700 kilometres to the west of the volcano across Kamchatka and the Okhotsk Sea.