30 People Presumed Dead in Japan after volcano eruption

At least 30 people are presumed dead after rescuers found them showing no signs of life on Sunday, near the summit of a Japanese volcano Mount Ontake. The volcano had started erupting a day earlier. Police said the people were in a state of “cardiac arrest,” meaning that they were discovered without a pulse and weren’t breathing, but hadn’t been declared dead by a doctor. Rescue teams had begun searching on Sunday for dozens of climbers who were caught by the sudden eruption of Mount Ontake.

The volcano in central Japan unleashed a huge cloud of ash late Saturday morning that billowed down the mountainside and engulfed hikers in its path. Witnesses described hearing a sound like thunder when the eruption began. The exact number of people unaccounted for was unclear, as officials were uncertain how many had already made it off the mountain. Relatives of the missing gathered near Mount Ontake on Sunday desperately seeking information.

Authorities estimated there were 200 to 250 hikers in the area at the time of the eruption. Most of them were reported to have managed to make the long trek down the mountain. But some people remained trapped in several lodges on Mount Ontake, and others were missing altogether, local authorities said. More than 350 rescue workers — a mix of police, firefighters and military personnel began climbing two separate routes up the mountain on Sunday morning, authorities in the nearby village of Otaki said. Aside from those in cardiac arrest, more than 25 people were reported to have been injured, 10 of them seriously, according to the government of Nagano prefecture, where the volcano is situated. Helicopters ferried some injured people off the mountainside.

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Among the climbers trapped in the cottages, at least 11 were injured, officials in Otaki said. They said they had observed 17-20 inches (40-50 centimeters) of volcanic ash covering the ground in some areas. The Japan Meteorological Agency has raised the Volcanic Alert Level for Ontake from 1 to 3. That means the public is advised to not approach the volcano, the summit of which is at an altitude of 10,060 feet (3,067 meters). The agency warned that another large eruption could take place in the next six days or so. Small continuous eruptions continued Sunday. The volcano’s plume of smoke and ash was reported to have disrupted air travel in Japan, causing delays at several airports.