Almost a year after Hawaii's most active volcano last spewed lava across the island,a curious tourist fell in. Miraculously,he survived.
Mount Agung on Indonesia's resort island of Bali has erupted again,spewing volcanic ash into the sky to a height of two kilometres.
Displaced residents from the island of Ambae are now anxious to get back to their ash-covered homes – even if the danger has not yet passed.
Mount Agung erupted for about three minutes,spewing white clouds of smoke and ash more than 700 metres into the air,
One 80-year-old man was extracted from the rubble of his home while a woman said her sister was pulled out from under a heavy armoire that toppled.
Indonesia has confirmed 429 people died in Saturday's killer wave,as Australia offered help,but was rebuffed.
As the death toll rises following the eruption of Anak Krakatau and the Sunda Strait tsunami,six other Indonesian volcanoes are in an"eruption state".
As news breaks of a deadly tsunami in the Sunda Strait,we revisit the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa,which caused destruction on an almost unimaginable scale and resulted in at least 36,417 deaths.
Incandescent material burst as high as one kilometre above the crater and flows of hot rock and ash extended nearly three kilometers down slope after the latest eruption.
Authorities urged people to evacuate and be alert for possible lahars - flows of mud,debris,water and pyroclastic material.
Ash spewing from the Popocatepetl volcano has reached the southern neighbourhoods of Mexico's capital.