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It's an unusual odour, coming from rocks which were molten lava less than a month ago. Tungurahua means "throat of fire" in the indigenous language, Quechua, but now it looks tranquil. Shrouded in ...
Translated from the indigenous language Quecha, Tungurahua means "throat of fire." The volcano is located in the province by the same name, part of the stretch of the Andes that runs through the ...
Tungurahua, one of the most active (and harder to pronounce) volcanoes in the Andes, has been experiencing explosions over the last few days. Not much in the report beyond the 125 explosions ...
The 5,023m-high Tungurahua, meaning "throat of fire" in the indigenous Quechua language, is one of South America's most active volcanoes.
023m-tall crater of Tungurahua, a wildly active stratovolcano whose name means ‘throat of fire’ in the local Quechua language. He then scans the deep ravines and twisting chasms that shoot ...
Tungurahua means "throat of fire" in the region’s indigenous Quechua language. Prior to 1999, the volcano's last major eruption occurred from 1916 to 1918, with minor activity continuing until ...
There are a number of webcams trained on Tungurahua, so you can try to check out the activity through the clouds yourself. Clouds partially obscure the eruptive plume at Tungurahua in Ecuador in ...
Tungurahua, one of Ecuador's 84 volcanos, began a fiery multi-day eruption around February 27th. It has spewed ash more than 20,000 feet in the air and has exploded at least 70 times, according to ...
The Tungurahua volcano spews fumes and lava on ... Its name means "throat of fire" in the local Quechua language. According to the BBC, "volcanologists have described the volcano's activity ...
Tungurahua means 'throat of fire' in the local indigenous language People living on the slopes of the Tungurahua volcano in Ecuador are being evacuated as a plume of gas and ash rises from its crater.
Tungurahua, which means "Throat of Fire" in the local Quechua language, has been classified as active since 1999.