Awesome spectacle of simultaneous volcanic eruptions in Kamchatka, Russia. You have to see it here to believe it.
Aerial Panoramas Capture Four Kamchatkan Volcanoes Erupting Simultaneously
By Shaunacy Ferro, Popular Science, 1 February 2013.
By Shaunacy Ferro, Popular Science, 1 February 2013.
It's not rare for volcanoes to erupt on Kamchatka, the far-eastern Russian peninsula that juts out into the Pacific Ocean. The density of active volcanoes there is so outstanding UNESCO made it a World Heritage Site.
Leaping Lava: Plosky Tolbachik, a Russian volcano that began erupting in November after four
dormant decades, is part of one of the most active volcanic regions in the Ring of Fire.
Since late November, though, four different volcanoes within 110 miles of each other on Kamchatka have been active simultaneously. Experts believe the volcanoes are fed by different sources of magma, making this even more unusual. In mid-January, eruptions from Plosky Tolbachik, one of the volcanoes, began forming a lava lake on the peninsula at its base.
AirPano, a group of Russian panoramic photographers, set out to document the geological excitement in 3-D aerial panoramas. They spent three days flying around Plosky Tolbachik capturing the shooting lava.
The results are nothing short of awesome. The high-def views virtual tour, though occasionally dizzying, is probably the closest most of us will come to the remote region, much less an erupting volcano. Against the snowy Russian backdrop - Kamchatka is located at about the same latitude as Great Britain, but between arctic Siberian winds and the cold sea current, it's essentially covered in snow from October through May - the fire and brimstone stands out especially dramatically.
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