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Mudslide destroys Russian geyser valley - report
03 Jun 2007 17:22:09 GMT
Source: Reuters
(Adds Russian television footage, changes sourcing)

MOSCOW, June 3 (Reuters) - A powerful mudslide has destroyed Eurasia's only geyser valley in the remote Kamchatka peninsula in Russia's Far East, Russian Vesti-24 television news channel reported on Sunday.

The first television footage from the hard-to-reach area showed the valley flooded with grey melting snow, mud, fallen trees and stones. No plumes of white steam from geysers -- a sight widely known from pictures -- could be seen.

"The valley has changed beyond recognition. It is a great shock for all of us," Yekaterina Radugova, director of the nature park, told Vesti-24.

Kamchatka, a 1,250 km (780-mile) long peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and the Sea of Okhotsk, is one of five places in the world where geysers -- springs ejecting hot water and steam into the air -- can be found. There were about 90 geysers in the valley.

"The biggest springs may still come through the debris but most of the others are probably lost forever," RIA news agency quoted an unnamed scientist at a local institute as saying.

The Emergencies Ministry in Moscow said it was unaware of the mudslide. Officials in Kamchatka could not immediately be reached for comment.

Scientists told RIA the slide had also destroyed deposits of siliceous sinter, or geyserite, a rare stone that takes many years to form. The geyserite cements the rock around the geyser and prevents erosion.

"Even a smallest dent in geyserite deposits in the geyser's crater can change the eruption's character," the scientist said. About 3,000 tourists come to the geyser valley every year.

Vesti-24 also quoted scientists as saying unusually warm weather in Kamchatka could have caused the slide. It said the torrent had also blocked the Geisernaya river and the water breaking through the dam could cause more damage in the valley.

There is no road leading to the valley. An official at the Ministry of Emergencies told RIA a mission to study the consequences of the slide will fly to the area on Monday.
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A man who has lost his relatives is comforted near the site of a landslide in Chittagong June 13, 2007. Severe monsoon weather which devastated Bangladesh extended its grip over South Asia on Wednesday, killing a dozen people and disrupting transport in eastern India, officials said. The death toll from a series of rain-triggered landslides in the Bangladesh port city of Chittagong rose to 118, and up to five million people across the country were either marooned or threatened by floods, disaster officials said. Picture taken June 13, 2007.



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