Debris from volcano closes Mexico airport

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    PUEBLA: Ashes from Mexico’s Popocatepetl volcano forced officials to close the airport in nearby Puebla for some 14 hours, to allow for cleanup after it spewed out heaps of ash and rock.

     

    The Puebla International Airport was able to reopen Wednesday after dozens  of workers cleared its runways of volcanic ash that posed a risk to departing  and arriving aircraft, said officials.
     
    The airport’s closing caused just one cancellation, a flight to Houston,  Texas early Wednesday, said Puebla’s civil protection director Jesus Morales.
     
    Since Popocatepetl came to life several weeks ago, it has spewed gas and  glowing rock as much as one mile (1.6 kilometers) beyond its crater, and has  intermittently belched out water vapor and ash.
     
    Officials in this central Mexican state have prepared temporary shelters as  a precaution and locals were wearing face masks to protect their lungs from  ashes in a populous area around the volcano.
     
    The city of Puebla lies in the shadow of the volcano about 55 kilometers  (35 miles) from the federal capital Mexico City.
     
    The country’s second highest peak, Popocatepetl, means “smoking mountain”  in the indigenous Nahuatl language.
     
    After moderate activity during most of the 20th century, the mountain  registered intense rumblings beginning in 1994, with the strongest coming in  December 2000, when nearby communities were evacuated. AFP
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