<p>The mega-blast that tore through Lebanon's capital with the force of an earthquake, killing more than 100 people and injuring over 4,000, resulted from the ignition of a huge depot of ammonium nitrate at Beirut's port, officials say, but many questions remain.</p>.<p>Here is what we know so far.</p>.<p>An initial large explosion in the port area of Beirut took place around 6:00 pm (1500 GMT), resulting in a fire, several small blasts and then a colossal explosion that flattened the harbour front and surrounding buildings.</p>.<p>Seismologists measured the event, which blew out windows at the city's international airport nine kilometres (more than five miles) away, as the equivalent of a 3.3-magnitude earthquake.</p>.<p>Video stills show an intense blazing fireball rising above a line of massive storage silos, then a billowing cloud towering into the sky as a powerful shockwave rips through Lebanon's biggest city.</p>.<p>Lebanon's Prime Minister Hassan Diab said 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, an agricultural fertiliser, stored in a portside warehouse had blown up, sparking "a disaster in every sense of the word".</p>.<p>Ammonium nitrate is an odourless crystalline substance that has been the cause of numerous industrial explosions over the decades.</p>.<p>When combined with fuel oils, it creates a potent explosive widely used in the construction industry, but also by insurgent groups such as the Taliban for improvised explosive devices.</p>.<p>Lebanon's General Security chief Abbas Ibrahim said the material had been confiscated years earlier and stored in the warehouse, located close to Beirut's shopping and nightlife districts.</p>.<p>There has been no indication from Lebanese officials that the explosions were caused deliberately.</p>.<p>US President Donald Trump said late Tuesday that US generals had told him the explosions appeared to have been caused by a "bomb of some kind."</p>.<p>"It looks like a terrible attack," Trump said. But a Pentagon spokesman, when asked about the president's remarks, told AFP that "we don't have anything for you" and "you will have to reach out to the White House for clarification."</p>.<p>Diab's government described the circumstances at the port that led to the explosion as "unacceptable" and vowed to investigate.</p>.<p>The blasts killed more than 100 people and injured over 4,000, the Lebanese Red Cross said Wednesday, in the latest updated toll.</p>.<p>Search and rescue teams were still sifting through areas surrounding the port, it added, with rubble from flattened buildings spread across a wide area.</p>.<p>Injuries were recorded right across the city, with glass blown out of buildings in multiple districts.</p>.<p>Lebanon's national defence council has declared Beirut a disaster zone and Diab has appealed to Lebanon's allies to "stand by" the country and send aid.</p>.<p>President Michel Aoun has announced he will release 100 billion lira ($66 million, 55 million euros) of emergency funds.</p>.<p>But the country is in the middle of an enormous economic crisis and its hospitals are already overwhelmed by the coronavirus pandemic.</p>.<p>The US, France, Qatar, Iran and even Lebanon's arch foe Israel have offered to send aid.</p>
<p>The mega-blast that tore through Lebanon's capital with the force of an earthquake, killing more than 100 people and injuring over 4,000, resulted from the ignition of a huge depot of ammonium nitrate at Beirut's port, officials say, but many questions remain.</p>.<p>Here is what we know so far.</p>.<p>An initial large explosion in the port area of Beirut took place around 6:00 pm (1500 GMT), resulting in a fire, several small blasts and then a colossal explosion that flattened the harbour front and surrounding buildings.</p>.<p>Seismologists measured the event, which blew out windows at the city's international airport nine kilometres (more than five miles) away, as the equivalent of a 3.3-magnitude earthquake.</p>.<p>Video stills show an intense blazing fireball rising above a line of massive storage silos, then a billowing cloud towering into the sky as a powerful shockwave rips through Lebanon's biggest city.</p>.<p>Lebanon's Prime Minister Hassan Diab said 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, an agricultural fertiliser, stored in a portside warehouse had blown up, sparking "a disaster in every sense of the word".</p>.<p>Ammonium nitrate is an odourless crystalline substance that has been the cause of numerous industrial explosions over the decades.</p>.<p>When combined with fuel oils, it creates a potent explosive widely used in the construction industry, but also by insurgent groups such as the Taliban for improvised explosive devices.</p>.<p>Lebanon's General Security chief Abbas Ibrahim said the material had been confiscated years earlier and stored in the warehouse, located close to Beirut's shopping and nightlife districts.</p>.<p>There has been no indication from Lebanese officials that the explosions were caused deliberately.</p>.<p>US President Donald Trump said late Tuesday that US generals had told him the explosions appeared to have been caused by a "bomb of some kind."</p>.<p>"It looks like a terrible attack," Trump said. But a Pentagon spokesman, when asked about the president's remarks, told AFP that "we don't have anything for you" and "you will have to reach out to the White House for clarification."</p>.<p>Diab's government described the circumstances at the port that led to the explosion as "unacceptable" and vowed to investigate.</p>.<p>The blasts killed more than 100 people and injured over 4,000, the Lebanese Red Cross said Wednesday, in the latest updated toll.</p>.<p>Search and rescue teams were still sifting through areas surrounding the port, it added, with rubble from flattened buildings spread across a wide area.</p>.<p>Injuries were recorded right across the city, with glass blown out of buildings in multiple districts.</p>.<p>Lebanon's national defence council has declared Beirut a disaster zone and Diab has appealed to Lebanon's allies to "stand by" the country and send aid.</p>.<p>President Michel Aoun has announced he will release 100 billion lira ($66 million, 55 million euros) of emergency funds.</p>.<p>But the country is in the middle of an enormous economic crisis and its hospitals are already overwhelmed by the coronavirus pandemic.</p>.<p>The US, France, Qatar, Iran and even Lebanon's arch foe Israel have offered to send aid.</p>