News Alert – Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano Now Creates Its Own Weather ~ July 3, 2018


Fountains from Fissure 8 spatter cone continue to supply lava to the open channel with intermittent small, short-lived overflows. These overflows rarely extend beyond the existing flow field. No active overflows were observed during this morning’s helicopter overflight. The spatter cone is now about 55 m (180 ft) tall at its highest point, and fountains rarely rise above that point. At the coast, the northern margin of the flow field is still oozing fresh lava at several points in the area of Kapoho Beach Lots. Lava was entering the sea over a broad area this morning primarily on the northern side of the entry area. As shown by yesterday’s thermal map of the flow field, the lava channel has crusted over about 0.8 km (0.5 mi) inland of the ocean entry; lava is moving beneath the crust and into still-molten interior of earlier flows before it enters the sea in multiple oozeouts.

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Hawaii Volcano Eruption Update – Sunday Morning (June 24, 2018) ~ June 24, 2018


Steve Brantley, Hawaiian Volcano Observatory deputy scientist-in-charge, said during a community meeting Tuesday evening in Pahoa that preliminary estimates show it has produced about 145 million cubic meters of lava — more than the last two eruptions in the area.

Hawaii Eruption Alert ~ June 11, 2018


MIlitary Update news : Hawaii volcano eruption: 30 BILLION gallons of LAVA released by Kilauea over Big Island

High Alert: Hawaii volcano eruption Scientists ALARMED as drone reveals mysterious CRACKS in Kilauea

A DRONE sent to investigate Hawaii’s erupting Kilauea volcano has left scientists baffled after the aerial footage showed concerning changes within the main crater at the volcano’s summit. A drone mission has alarmed scientists monitoring the erupting Hawaii volcano, which has become one of the world’s most dangerous and volatile sites.

Kilauea has shocked the world with streams of lava swallowing houses and giant fissures opening up across Hawaii.

The latest aerial drone footage of the volcano has revealed dramatic changes within the volcano spotted at one of Kilauea’s main craters There are new alarming cracks and fault seen in a collapsed crater, some of which are spewing with intense steam.

Scientists are concerned that an “expanding collapsed crater” and the debris blocking the vent could trigger a massive explosion. The Halema‘uma‘u crater has undergone a sudden transformation since the eruptions began in early May, including the surprising disappearance of a lava lake.

The drone footage from the US Geological Survey (USGS) shows “yellow sulfur substance on the rubble-covered floor and a scattering of large ballistic blocks around the crater rim”. USGS officials revealed that the empty vent once housed a 12-acre lava lake up until a few weeks ago.

The vent is currently empty of lava and has been stretched to massive 100-acres. The boulders blocking the crater’s eruptive vent have stopped huge clouds of ash emerging, but the consequences are unknown. Kyle Anderson, a geophysicist with the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, said experts are uncertain whether this could end eruptions or cause another bigger explosion.

He said: “We really don’t know the implications of this long-term. “It’s possible that new explosions will blast through the rubble at the bottom of the vent. “These may or may not be larger than the previous explosions.

“It is also possible that the vent may become permanently blocked, ending the explosions entirely.” The depth of the crater is not yet known. This comes as vulcanologists showed that the month-old eruption on Hawaii’s Big Island has entered a new, quieter calmer phase inside the crater.