Photos: Life under the Tungurahua volcano

The Tungurahua Volcano
The Tungurahua Volcano throws incandescent rocks and lava near the town of Runtun, Ecuador, on Dec. 4, 2011. Residents near the volcano, south of nation's capital, Quito, have been ordered to evacuate the area.
PABLO COZZAGLIO/AFP/Getty Images

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) - Ecuador's government is urging four villages to evacuate because of increased activity in the Tungurahua volcano not far from the country's capital. About 700 people live in the farming communities on the slopes of the volcano in the Andes.

Ecuador's Geophysical Institute says increased activity that began Sunday is billowing columns of ash, sending superheated clouds of gas down the slopes and cascading hot rocks from the summit, and it is recording a gradual accumulation of lava in the mountain.

The 16,480-foot (5,023-meter) volcano is in a sparsely populated area about 84 miles (135 kilometers) southeast of the capital, Quito. It has been active since 1999.

(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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