KEY POINTS:
- Six people now confirmed dead, grim task of autopsies and formal identification continues today
- Eight people remain missing on the island, presumed dead
- 30 are in hospital - 24 are in four regional burns units and the other six will be transferred as soon as possible
- Three patients have been discharged
- 47 people were on or near the island when the volcano erupted on Monday afternoon - 24 were Australian, nine were from the United States, five were Kiwis, four were Germans, two were Chinese and one was Malaysian
Newly unearthed video shows White Island tour guide Hayden Marshall-Inman sharing his fears about working on the active volcano.
Marshall-Inman, who died in Monday's eruption and was the first victim to be identified, appears in the video shot by a tourist in 2018.
Telling a group of tourists about the risks of the island, Marshall-Inman says: "Last September is the most nervous I've ever been. There was an ash eruption, I could definitely feel the nerves inside me for sure."
The short video shows Marshall-Inman talking to a tourist as he heads toward Whakaari/White Island in a small boat.