A volcanic eruption on Indonesia's turbulent Mount Merapi churned and boiled Monday, sending renewed flows of lava and hot ash down its slopes for a second day.
Pyroclastic flows — avalanches of rocks, ash and volcanic gasses — burst from the mountain's actively growing lava dome inside the crater.
The 2,968-meter (9,737-foot) peak is near Yogyakarta, an ancient city of several hundred thousand people embedded in a large metro area on the island of Java. The city is also a center of Javanese culture and a seat of royal dynasties going back centuries.
Mount Merapi's last major eruption in 2010 killed 347 people. Villagers living on Merapi's fertile slopes were advised to stay 5 kilometers (3.1 miles) away from the crater's mouth.
Hanik Humaida, the head of Yogyakarta's Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation Center, said the lava dome had been partially collapsing since Sunday, when the latest eruption began. The initial blast sent hot ash 1,000 meters (3,280 feet) into the atmosphere.
The mountain spewed at least three new pyroclastic flows on Monday, Humaida said.
Mount Merapi is the most volatile of more than 120 active volcanoes in Indonesia and has repeatedly erupted with lava and gas clouds.
The Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation Center did not raise Merapi's alert status, which already was at the second-highest of four levels since the mountain began erupting last November.
Indonesia, an archipelago of 270 million people, is prone to earthquakes and volcanic activity because it sits along the Pacific "Ring of Fire," a horseshoe-shaped series of seismic fault lines around the ocean.