Fireside tales: understanding experiences of previous eruptions among other factors that influence the decision to evacuate from eruptive activity of Volcán de Fuego

Ailsa Naismith, M. Teresa Armijos, Edgar Antonio Barrios Escobar, William Chigna, I. Matthew Watson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Volcán de Fuego (Guatemala) is capable of large (VEI≥2) explosive eruptions like that of June 2018, which triggered pyroclastic flows that devastated the community of San Miguel Los Lotes, causing hundreds of fatalities and severe long-term socio-economic impacts. Future volcanic risk mitigation efforts are likely to involve temporary evacuation of local communities, the success of which requires co-operation between locals, scientists, and decision-makers. However, how locals' experiences of eruptive activity influence their responses to evacuation has not been studied in detail. We investigated these themes through semi-structured interviews that focussed on direct experience as opposed to volcanic risk perception, revealing substantial differences between scientists' and locals' observations of Fuego’s activity. Furthermore, a disparity emerged between communities on Fuego's west and east flanks in terms of direct prior eruption experience and communication with authorities. These findings have serious implications for future evacuation efforts at Fuego and at other highly populated volcanoes.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages205
JournalVolcanica
Volume3
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Oct 2020

Keywords

  • Pyroclastic flows
  • Self-evacuation
  • Trust
  • Knowledge
  • Risk
  • Volcán de Fuego

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