Political instability, famine and drought may have come to a head around 44 B.C., when Italy's Mount
Etna erupted explosively.
Not exact matches
Mount
Etna, Europe's highest volcano,
erupted last Thursday in the most dramatic eruption seen for two decades.
The buildings themselves are part of the landscape, made out of the lava that poured out of Mount
Etna when it
erupted in 1669.
Parts of
Etna, for example, are slumping at around 20 cm a year, which means that it will probably not
erupt any time soon.