Sparks fly from Japanese volcano

A volcano in Japan has, not far from a nuclear power plant but there has been no damage, nor anyone hurt.

Volcanic smoke billows from Mount Sakurajima in Kagoshima

Japan has raised a volcano warning level, urging residents to prepare for evacuation. (AAP) Source: AAP

A Japanese volcano about 50 kilometres from a nuclear plant has erupted, shooting ash nearly two kilometres air along with fountains of lava.

There were no immediate report of damage and operations at the power station were not affected.

Following what they termed an "explosive eruption," Japan's Meteorological Agency raised the warning level on the peak, which experiences hundreds of small eruptions a year, to three, meaning that people should not approach the mountain.

"It appears that stones have been thrown about 2 km from the crater, but this area is quite far from any communities," Kazuhiro Ishihara, an emeritus professor at Kyoto University, told NHK national television.

Television footage showed red streams of lava bursting from the side of the mountain, but Ishihara said he thought the impact of the eruption would not be that serious.

The Sendai nuclear power station, run by Kyushu Electric Power and located on the same island, resumed operations last year after being shut down, along with all of Japan's nuclear plants, after a 2011 earthquake and tsunami triggered a meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant.

A spokeswoman for Kyushu Electric said there was no impact from the eruption on the plant and its operations, and it was not taking any special precautions.

Japan lies on the "Ring of Fire" - a seismically active horse shoe-shaped band of fault lines and volcanoes around the edges of the Pacific Ocean - and has more than 100 active volcanoes.


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Source: AAP



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