
Volcano eruption Etna leads to cancellation of 130 flights in Sicily
"The arrival flight operations continue to be suspended and departures are completely blocked, currently until 18:00 local," reads the information..
- Center2
- Center-right1
2 agency rewrites / co-publications detected
Summary
"The arrival flight operations continue to be suspended and departures are currently completely blocked until 18:00 local," reads the information published on the Italian airport infrastructure website. Volcano eruption Etna leads to the cancellation of 130 flights in Sicily. Etna entered a new eruptive process on June 26, characterized by the expulsion of lava, which forced the Italian authorities to intensify the level of surveillance on the volcano.
Furthermore, The National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology of Italy (INGV) reported that ash emissions began early Sunday from a crack on the top of the volcano. According to INGV, lava flows started at the end of June ceased on Saturday, but this new and sudden ash emission changed the plans of thousands of travelers. Between the night of July 2 and 3, a second and small flow of lava was detected that advanced about a hundred meters before stopping.
In addition, Read Also: Etna's ash cloud forces Sicily closing part of airspace.
Cross-referenced from 3 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
"The arrival flight operations continue to be suspended and departures are currently completely blocked until 18:00 local," reads the information published on the Italian airport infrastructure website.
reliability low1/3 sourcesVolcano eruption Etna leads to the cancellation of 130 flights in Sicily.
reliability low1/3 sourcesEtna entered a new eruptive process on June 26, characterized by the expulsion of lava, which forced the Italian authorities to intensify the level of surveillance on the volcano.
reliability low1/3 sourcesThe National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology of Italy (INGV) reported that ash emissions began early Sunday from a crack on the top of the volcano.
reliability low1/3 sourcesAccording to INGV, lava flows started at the end of June ceased on Saturday, but this new and sudden ash emission changed the plans of thousands of travelers.
reliability low1/3 sources
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
Between the night of July 2 and 3, a second and small flow of lava was detected that advanced about a hundred meters before stopping.
according to ECORead Also: Etna's ash cloud forces Sicily closing part of airspace
according to Notícias ao Minuto — Economia +1
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
No notable framing divergence.
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
No blind spot detected: every side covers the same facts.
Sources3 sources cross-checked
Center-right1