JAKARTA, Indonesia — A volcano erupted near Indonesia's third-biggest city of Bandung on Friday, sending ash several hundred yards into the air and triggering warnings for people to stay away.
Chicago elects a new mayor, Felicity Huffman appears in court, cherry blossoms reach peak bloom and more.
In 2018, the nation bid farewell to two Republican giants. Deadly fires scorched California, and Hurricane Michael seemed to come out of nowhere. An American actress became a British princess, and a shooting at a Florida school seemed painfully familiar. Migrants dreaming of Europe braved the Mediterranean, and migrants fleeing Central America flocked to the U.S. border. See them all here.
After Guatemala's Volcan de Fuego erupted later that day, he has never seen her again. Now he is searching for her body – and those of other family members.
At least 69 people were killed when a volcano in Guatemala spewed lava, ash, rocks and deadly hot gas, authorities said late Monday.
See more photos from the devastated area here.
Harry marries Meghan, lava gushes into the Pacific, a starry night in Switzerland and more.
This is the lava flow this morning in Hawaii. https://nbcnews.to/2LfUQNc
WATCH: 38 years ago today, Mount St. Helens exploded in the most destructive volcanic event in US history.
Dozens of homes have been destroyed by Hawaii's Kilauea volcano as scientists reported lava spewing more than 200 feet into the air. See more images here.
Mount Mayon has been acting up for more than a week, ejecting ash and lava fountains nearly two miles from the crater in a picturesque but increasingly dangerous eruption.
See more photos here.
(Bullit Marquez/AP)
(Photo: Robert Krimmel / USGS)
On May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens awoke from its slumber with a devastating eruption.
(Photo: Kyodo News via AP)
A volcanic eruption has raised a new island, according to earthquake experts and the Japanese coast guard.
(Photo: Japan Meteorological Agency via AFP - Getty Images)
Residents in a southern Japanese city were busy washing ash off the streets Monday after a nearby volcano spewed a record-high smoke plume into the sky.
(Photo: Theo Chesley / Alaskan Volcano Observatory via AP)
A remote Alaska volcano continues to erupt, spewing lava and ash clouds.
The Alaska Volcano Observatory said Thursday a continuous cloud of ash, steam and gas from Pavlof Volcano has been seen 20,000 feet above sea level.