Indonesia volcano eruption kills three
Aerial footage of the island, about 1,000 km (620 miles) south of Tokyo, showed a cone in the middle surrounded by vegetation. Researchers from the Environment Ministry who swam the final distance from a small boat to the island to minimise biological contamination were the first people to set foot on the expanded island on October 20.
They collected rock, plant and insect samples and observed the first colonisation of the island by masked gannets, a large seafaring bird. In 2013, an eruption next to Nishinoshima, a cluster of rocks barely 650 meters long and 200 meters wide swallowed the outcropping and grew into a 2.7 square kilometre (1.04 square mile) island, bigger than the city state of Monaco.
Villages in ashes after deadly Indonesia volcano eruption
Aside from ecological research, the team hopes to collect samples of lava and ash to learn more about the growth process of a volcanic island.
They also planted several seismic monitors around the uninhabited island. Studying volcanoes is high priority for Japan, which lies on the "Ring of Fire", a horseshoe-shaped band of fault lines and volcanoes around the Pacific Ocean.
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