Mount Etna, Europe's most active volcano, erupted recently, releasing bright orange lava flows captured in striking footage taken by drones and ground cameras. The eruption occurred at an altitude of 3,000 meters on June 26 and by Monday, June 29, the lava had descended to 2,700 meters. Italian authorities confirmed there is no danger to the population, though scientists continue monitoring seismic activity. Researchers from Manchester University studied how overheating affects volcanic eruptions, using magma samples from the 2021 Tachogaiti eruption on La Palma, Spain, which caused significant destruction.
Bias read (Center): The article focuses on a natural event and scientific research related to volcanoes, with no political implications or controversy. It provides factual information about the eruption and includes academic findings without any ideological framing.
Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 80): Factually close to the primary source, accurately reporting the eruption details and lava descent. However, includes additional information about scientific research unrelated to the main event, which slightly reduces factuality. Objectivity is good but includes some emotionally charged descriptions



