New Zealand volcano eruption – Newlywed US couple among tourists ‘badly burned’ in deadly White Island blast
A NEWLYWED couple were among the 31 people injured during a volcano eruption on White Island in New Zealand which killed five. Matt and Lauren Urey from Virginia sustained severe injuries during the terrifying blast which occured during their honeymoon on a Royal Caribbean Cruise. Relatives of the couple confirmed that Matt suffered burns to […]
A NEWLYWED couple were among the 31 people injured during a volcano eruption on White Island in New Zealand which killed five.
Matt and Lauren Urey from Virginia sustained severe injuries during the terrifying blast which occured during their honeymoon on a Royal Caribbean Cruise.
A photo taken from a boat that had left the island just minutes before the volcanic eruption in new Zealand[/caption]
A helicopter is seen on the island after the volcano erupted covered in ash[/caption]
Relatives of the couple confirmed that Matt suffered burns to 80 percent of his body while Lauren has burns on 25 percent of her body, reports CBS 6.
Their family members are reportedly en route to New Zealand to be nearer the injured pair in their time of need.
The US tourists are among the missing and 31 injured after a deadly eruption on a volcanic island in New Zealand killed five.
Another newlywed couple from Brisbane and a seven-year-old boy remain missing as of Monday afternoon.
James, 23, and Madeleine Whitehouse, 24, married last September and had been enjoying a scenic trip before the blast.
“You fill my heart with joy every day James, and I’m so blessed to be your wife,” Mrs Whitehouse wrote about her husband on their first wedding anniversary.
They are among the eight tourists who are still missing after the horrific natural disaster.
Prime minister Jacinda Ardern confirmed a number of people are in critical condition with devastating burns following the volcanic ash blast.
Tourists from the US, Britain, China and Malaysia were among the injured along with New Zealanders after the eruption on White Island.
As well as the five people who lost their lives, eight are still missing, including several British people.
Five Brits – including two 67-year-old men and an 80-year-old woman – are listed as among those still missing on a website set up by the New Zealand Red Cross, the Evening Standard reported.
The volcano suddenly erupted at 2.11pm local time on Monday, sending a 12,000ft plume of smoke and rock into the air.
Images showed one group of people trekking across the centre of the volcano’s crater just a minute before the eruption.
The first victim has been identified as a tour guide for White Island tours.
Tony Bonne, former mayor of the coastal town of Whakatane, described the man as a young, energetic, and experience guide, news.com.au reported.
WARNING SIGNS
The disaster followed a series of warning signs that had been growing more alarming over recent weeks, as questions are asked about why tour groups were allowed to visit the island.
Survivors of the blast were taken to hospitals on New Zealand’s North Island, many with severe burns.
Three Brits – two 67-year-old men and an 80-year-old woman – are listed as among those still missing on a website set up by the New Zealand Red Cross, the Evening Standard reported.
The Sun is not naming the trio because neither has been confirmed by authorities to have been on White Island.
A 27-year-old woman from London was also earlier listed as missing, but her family later confirmed her to be safe, according to the Standard.
The site was launched at the request of New Zealand police, although all information on the site is being submitted by concerned members of the public.
Police said people from overseas can also call +64 9105 105 to submit information about friends or family who might have been on White Island at the time of the blast.
Among those listed on the site as currently missing are people from Australia, Singapore, China, the Czech Republic, Guatemala, and Burma.
Around half of those on the island are thought to have been from Australia.
‘NO SIGNS OF LIFE’
A statement released by New Zealand police just after midnight local time said reconnaissance flights over the island saw “no signs of life…at any point”.
It continued: “Police believe that anyone who could have been taken from the island alive was rescued at the time of the evacuation.
“Based on the information we have, we do not believe there are any survivors on the island.”
It added that officials were working “urgently” to determine how many people had died, and that the military would be deploying drones to survey the area at first light.
Just last month, authorities raised its Volcanic Alert Level to Level 2, as scientists observed increasing amounts of sulphur dioxide gas – a key indicator of rising magma deep in its bowels.
This afternoon, that alert level shot up to 4 – but has since come down to 3.
And there have been several eruptions in recent years, including two in 2016, with one expert saying the volcano was “’a disaster waiting to happen”.
Emeritus Professor Ray Cas, from Monash University, told the Australian Science Media Centre: “I have always felt that it was too dangerous to allow the daily tour groups that visit the uninhabited island volcano by boat and helicopter.”
Speaking at a press conference, New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern said: “I know that there will be a huge amount of anxiety for those who had loved ones on the island at the time.
“I can assure them police are doing everything they can.”
She is now reported to have arrived in the area and to be meeting with local officials.
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CHILLING LAST PHOTO
A scientific monitoring camera appeared to capture a group of tourists walking through the volcano’s crater at 2.10pm – just one minute before the eruption.
The camera – which takes a new still image every ten minutes – did not take another clear shot, and is believed to have been buried in rubble from the blast.
A fleet of rescue helicopters was dispatched to send emergency workers to the area in the hope of finding survivors.
Rescuers were able to reach the shore by boat, but National Operation Commander Deputy Commissioner John Tims told a press conference the island remained too dangerous to go further.
He added that there remained a possibility of further eruptions.
A group watch the eruption from a boat[/caption]
Paramedics tend to an injured person evacuated from the island[/caption]
An aerial view of the volcano in the aftermath of the eruption[/caption]
WHY DID WHITE ISLAND ERUPT?
Just below Earth's outer crust is a layer of magma, or liquid rock, known as the mantle.
Volcanoes form when pressure in the mantle begins to build, and magma is forced up through gaps in the Earth’s crust.
In certain conditions, such as movements of the planet’s tectonic plates or currents of heat in the mantle, the pressure will build further and, eventually, the volcano will erupt, throwing magma into the air.
New Zealand lies on the so-called Ring of Fire, a 25,000-mile chain of 452 volcanoes around the edge of the Pacific Ocean.
The ring runs up past Asia and Russia, across to Alaska, and down the westerly coasts of North and South America.
Since 1850, about 90 per cent of the most powerful eruptions in the world have happened along this boundary.
White Island was a very active volcano and questions are now being raised about whether tourists should ever have been allowed to visit.
Dr. Jessica Johnson, a volcanologist at the University of East Anglia, told the Guardian that increased numbers of small earthquakes and more volcanic gas detected than usual in recent weeks had seen the alert level raised.
Even with the alert levels raised, volcanic eruptions are notoriously difficult to predict.
Speaking to the Australia Science Media Centre, Raymond Cas of Monash University’s School of Earth, Atmosphere, and Environment described White Island as a “disaster waiting to happen”.
“Having visited it twice, I have always felt that it was too dangerous to allow the daily tour groups,” he said.
‘WE GOT OFF JUST IN TIME’
New Zealand Cruise Association CEO Kevin O’Sullivan has said that between 30 and 38 passengers from Royal Caribbean cruise ship Ovation of the Seas were on the island at the time of the eruption.
In a post on Facebook, White Island Tours operator Calvin Kingi wrote that his company’s group got off the island just in time.
“White Island just erupted as we left, we have our work mates and a tour still on the island, I hope they okay,” he said.
Tourist Michael Schade gave a harrowing account of the blast – saying his tour boat left the island just 30 minutes earlier.
He wrote on Twitter: “Woman my mom tended to was in critical condition but seemed strong by the end.
“The helicopters on the island looked destroyed.
“This is so hard to believe. Our whole tour group were literally standing at the edge of the main crater not 30 minutes before.”
DEADLY VOLCANO
Twelve people were killed on the island in 1914 when it was being mined for sulphur.
Part of a crater wall collapsed and a landslide destroyed the miners’ village and the mine itself.
The remains of buildings from another mining enterprise in the 1920s are now a tourist attraction.
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The island became a private scenic reserve in 1953, and daily tours allow more than 10,000 people to visit the volcano every year.
White Island is also known by the indigenous Maori name Whakaari.
Tour operators are seen evacuating people around 12 minutes after the eruption[/caption]
A boat was able to reach the shore and evacuate people[/caption]
An injured person is wheeled onto an ambulance in the town of Whakatane on New Zealand’s North Island[/caption]
The eruption seen from a helicopter[/caption]
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