Since the Cumbre Vieja volcano on La Palma erupted weeks ago, the devastation caused by the lava as it reached the sea has been seen through the media. Important TV figures did not hesitate to travel to the Canary Island to tell what is happening from there and interview those affected. However, in the Spanish program The Teloneros de Cuatro it was observed in the last hours the unusual image of how a journalist burned live touching the lava.
“We see the volcanic stone that is super hot ”, the reporter began by saying to the camera Alejandro Rodriguez as he etched a lava tongue just blocking the way right behind him. “It’s super hot. Inside is Red Hot”, he continued the story as he put his hand close to one of the lava rocks. “For the first time touching a stone freshly baked ”, added.
As expected, the journalist burned several times by putting your hand on the lava. An attitude unwise what was highly criticized in social networks, and even in the program itself in which the press worker works. “Oh, I touch the lava and it burns me,” one of the presenters ironic.
The one of the journalists has been one of the most criticized groups to stay too close of lava. In this sense, this week a reporter from Ana Rosa’s program was questioned by the Civil Guard for recording where it should not, after which it should have been rescue.
The lava from the volcano on the Spanish island of La Palma, which flows continuously towards the sea, formed a tongue that quickly gains ground to the water and it already almost reaches 19 hectares Of surface.
Since the lava flow of the Cumbre Vieja volcano, which has been erupting for 11 days, finally reached the sea during the early hours of Tuesday to Wednesday last, the lava is gone solidifying and forming a delta the fajana that It does not stop growing.
“The surface is approaching 19 hectares,” said David Calvo, spokesman for the Canary Islands Volcanological Institute (Involcan) this Thursday afternoon.
While it has left no casualties, the eruption has some 855 buildings destroyed based on data recorded by the European Copernicus geospatial measurement system. What’s more, 6000 people they were forced to leave their homes on the island of 85,000 inhabitants.
For their part, local authorities also warned on Thursday of the effects harmful from Ash rain and its impact on air quality.
Disclaimer: This article is generated from the feed and not edited by our team.