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UPDATE: Guatemala Volcano Death Toll Rises To 62

The volcano spewed billowing clouds of ash into the sky — and more dangerously, sent a deadly mix of lava, pumice and gas speeding toward villages on Sunday. Authorities fear the death toll may rise.

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People flee El Rodeo village, Escuintla department, 20 miles south of Guatemala City, after the eruption of the Fuego Volcano on Sunday.

The known death toll for the eruption of Guatemala’s Volcano of Fire has taken a sudden jump upward.

The director of Guatemala’s National Institute of Forensic Science said that 62 bodies have been recovered following the eruption.

Fanuel Garcia said Monday that only 13 of those bodies have so far been identified. The bodies were recovered in the hamlets of Los Lotes and El Rodeo.

The head of the country’s disaster agency had previously put the death toll at 33, but warned it would go higher.

The volcano west of Guatemala City staged and explosive eruption Sunday, burying surrounding hamlets in hot ash and mud that gave residents on the volcano’s flanks little time to escape.

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Around midday Sunday, the bright blue sky less than 30 miles southwest of Guatemala City darkened to a billowing gray — and with a vicious rumble, one of Central America’s most active volcanoes stirred to life again. Mount Fuego spewed ash and lava from its heights, blanketing the lands nearby and leaving at least 25 people dead.

Many people were injured and, with others still missing, Guatemalan authorities fear the death toll may rise further as the aftermath from the sudden eruption becomes clear. More than 3,200 people have evacuated the area.

“It is too early to know the full extent of the damage,” President Jimmy Morales said in a statement posted to Facebook. And, as rescue workers sought survivors in the pale gray just miles from his presidential palace in the capital, Morales added that it is a time for Guatemalans to come together in “unity, prayer and solidarity.”

He has declared three national days of mourning.

Guatemala’s national disaster response agency, CONRED, said overnight that the eruption lasted more than 16 hours before finally quieting. The agency described the substance ejected by the volcano as a pyroclastic flow — defined by the U.S. Geological Survey as “a high-density mix of hot lava blocks, pumice, ash and volcanic gas.

Johan Ordonez/AFP/Getty Images/Via NPR
The remains of San Miguel Los Lotes, roughly 20 miles southwest of Guatemala City, stand covered in a thick layer of ash on Monday.

The USGS notes that pyroclastic flows can reach temperatures of up to 1,300 degrees Fahrenheit and reach speeds of more than 50 mph, giving them the ability to “knock down, shatter, bury or carry away nearly all objects and structures in their path.”

“It’s a river of lava that overflowed its banks and affected the El Rodeo village. There are injured, burned and dead people,” CONRED General Secretary Sergio Cabañas said on radio.

Eddy Sánchez of the country’s National Institute of Seismology, Volcanology, Meteorology and Hydrology told the newspaper Diario de Centro América that thick black smoke and ash also fell for miles around the volcano — including in San Lucas, Antigua Guatemala, Alotenango, Chimaltenango and Zaragoza.

Most of the victims reported initially were from the village of El Rodeo, according to Guatemala’s El Periódico newspaper.

Johan Ordonez/AFP/Getty Images/Via NPR
Police officers helping with the rescue efforts Monday look at the slope of the Fuego volcano from San Miguel Los Lotes. Evidence of the pyroclastic flow lingers on Mount Fuego’s side, where the accumulated ash and rock have left bright gray scars from the eruption.

“The only thing we could do was run with my family and we left our possessions in the house,” El Rodeo resident Efrain Gonzalez told the BBC. “Now that all the danger has passed, I came to see how our house was — everything is a disaster.”

Not everyone was so lucky. Pyroclastic flows move quickly, and in Fuego’s case, the fiery rivers loosed by Fuego surprised many victims with their speed.

“Not everybody could escape,” said another El Rodeo resident, Consuelo Hernández, according to El Periódico. She spoke to a TV crew as she walked down road loud with sirens, dazed and as layered in ash as the busy roadway she was crossing. “I think they were buried.”

The eruption Sunday was Fuego’s second this year, according to CONRED, though the first incident, in February, left far less of an impact.

Shortly after the scale of the devastation became clear, other leaders from around the world offered their condolences and words of support on Twitter.

“All our solidarity and support to the President Jimmy Morales and the Guatemalan people for the loss of human life,” Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto tweeted Sunday.

The foreign ministry in Israel, where Guatemala recently became one of the few countries to move its embassy to Jerusalem, announced that Israel would be sending emergency aid, including food and medicine.

“Guatemala,” the ministry announced, “Israel stands with you!”

In the meantime, Guatemalan authorities remained at work on what could be a daunting rescue effort. As of midday Monday, CONRED said the deadly eruption has affected more than 1.7 million people.

Orlando Estrada/AFP/Getty Images/ Via NPR
The Fuego Volcano in eruption, seen from Alotenango municipality, Sacatepequez department, about 40 miles southwest of Guatemala City.
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