At least 47 people are now known to have died in Japan's worst volcanic disaster in nearly 90 years. But a number of people remain unaccounted for, with fears some could be entombed in the thick, sticky ash that now coats the peak after Saturday's eruption.
Heavy rain forced police, troops and firefighters to abandon their search of Mount Ontake today, the latest reminder of the hostility of the 3,067 metre (10,121-feet) mountain, which is still billowing steam and toxic gas.
Five bodies were stuck in between jagged boulders up to three metres (nine feet) across, with emergency workers having to use specialist rock-breaking tools to free them, the paper said.
Another rescuer told the Nikkan Sports daily that moving around on the bed of ash was difficult because of the way it had mixed with steam.
"It sticks like damp concrete," he said.
Rescue workers are having to tread extremely carefully because of worries that the blanket of ash they are walking on could be hiding crevices, or unstable rocks.
"The bulk of the rocks are estimated to be between the size of a human fist and a head," said Takayuki Kaneko, a vulcanologist at the University of Tokyo's Earthquake Research Institute.
"They fell so densely that some broke up (after hitting other rocks and objects) and scattered," he told public broadcaster NHK.
"I think people there must have had no idea where to run and been plunged into panic," he said.
Inside, futon mattresses lay on the floor, where some of the injured had spent the night before their rescue on Sunday.
