A split image showing the volcano debris covering a car and house and the volcano erupting.
The ash spewed miles into the air, blanketing a Russian town in debris.
  • The Shiveluch volcano in Russia buried a nearby town in ash, covering houses, cars, and streets. 
  • The volcano, located in the Kamchatka region, spewed debris miles into the air. 
  • Photos and videos show the aftermath of the volcano's eruption. 
This is Shiveluch, a volcano in the eastern Russian peninsula of Kamchatka.
Lava streams and smoke from an eruption late last year.
The Shiveluch volcano erupting late last year.

Its current eruption period began in August 1999 and has produced ongoing explosions and emissions, according to the Global Volcanism Program at the Smithsonian Institution.

 

It erupted early Tuesday morning, shooting emissions miles into the atmosphere.
Satellite imagery shows Shiveluch beginning to erupt.
Satellite imagery shows Shiveluch beginning to erupt.

A video posted on Twitter by Russia shows one perspective of the eruption's enormous volcanic ash clouds, which spread miles into the air and spewed thick debris across the region.

 

Ash from the eruption covered large areas of land, including nearby villages.
Volcanic ash covering a house and car.
Volcanic ash covering a Russian house and car.

One video from Reuters showed villagers making "ash angels" and trekking through debris. 

 

Some towns were filled with piles of ash, making driving and traveling difficult.
Volcanic emissions covered streets, pilling up like snow.
Volcanic emissions covered streets, pilling up like snow.

According to AP, dust clouds spread more than 300 miles north, blanketing whole areas and towns. Over 40,000 square miles of land was hit. 

The volcanic ash was inches thick in some areas.
A measuring tape shows how thick the debris settled in some areas.
A measuring tape shows how thick the debris settled in some areas.

The eruption fallout was described by Russian Academy of Sciences Geophysical Survey scientists as the biggest from the volcano in almost 60 years, AP reported.

 

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