Mount Etna volcano in southern Italy erupts, halts flights

Mount Etna has erupted multiple times this summer, including one time in early August when it temporarily halted flights.

CATANIA, Italy – Mount Etna, the largest volcano in Europe, erupted early Thursday morning local time and interrupted flight operations at a nearby airport.

Located on the east coast of Sicily, the volcano spewed enough ash into the air to halt flights coming in and out of Catania Airport Thursday morning.

"The runway at #CTAairport is unusable due to volcanic ash fallout: both arrivals and departures are suspended," airport officials tweeted.

WATCH: LAVA EXPLODES OUT OF ITALY'S MOUNT ETNA VOLCANO

As of Thursday afternoon, the airport announced that it had resumed departures but will limit the number of arrivals per hour throughout the evening.

An error occurred while retrieving the Tweet. It might have been deleted.

The National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology detected an increase in Strombolian activity on the volcano Wednesday night. 

Strombolian activity involves discrete explosive bursts that throw fiery volcanic material into the air, according to the National Park Service.

HOW TO WATCH FOX WEATHER

Mount Etna has erupted multiple times this summer, including one time in early August when it temporarily halted flights.