Italy's Mount Etna, Europe's biggest live volcano, showed signs of new activity by emitting "modest" clouds of ash on Friday, vulcanologists said.
But the black plume spewed forth by the volcano was "dispersed by wind" across the area of Sicily that Mount Etna looms over, the National Institute of Geophysics and Vulcanology (INGV) said in a statement.
The renewed activity has not had an impact on flights from the international airport of Catania, which sits at the foot of the volcano.
Europe's highest volcano, Mount Etna has erupted frequently over the last 500,000 years.
Its last phase of eruptions was in the 2017, while its last major one was in 2009.
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Flight warning as Indonesia's Mt Sinabung erupts again
Jakarta (AFP) Aug 13, 2020
Indonesia's Mount Sinabung erupted again Thursday with a string of blasts that sent plumes of ash two kilometres (1.2 miles) into the sky, triggering a flight warning and fears of lava flows.
The activity marked at least the eighth time that the rumbling volcano on Sumatra island has erupted in less than a week, although there were no injures or major damage reported.
Authorities issued a warning to planes flying near the volcano which last saw a deadly eruption in 2016.
"There is potential ... read more