Montreal Gazette

Volcano’s new hazard: clouds of acid, glass

- Jae C. Hong and audrey MCavoy in Pahoa, Hawaii

The eruption of Kilauea volcano in Hawaii sparked new safety warnings about toxic gas on the Big Island’s southern coastline after lava began flowing into the ocean and setting off a chemical reaction. The molten rock started pouring into the sea over the weekend. It’s been generating plumes of lava haze or “laze” as it interacts with seawater. It’s just the latest hazard from a weeks-old eruption that has so far generated earthquake­s and featured gushing molten rock, giant ash plumes and sulphur dioxide. The eruption has destroyed more than 40 buildings forced more than 2,000 people to evacuate.

Here are key things to know about the latest volcanic threat:

WHAT IS LAVA HAZE?

It is made of dense white clouds of steam, toxic gas and tiny shards of volcanic glass. Janet Babb, a geologist with the Hawaiian Volcano Observator­y, says the plume “looks innocuous, but it’s not.”

HOW IS IT CREATED?

Laze is formed when lava enters the ocean and triggers a series of chemical reactions. The seawater cools the lava, which forms a glass that shatters. Tiny pieces are picked up by the steam cloud, which contains hydrochlor­ic acid that also is created by the interactio­n of lava and the ocean. “Just like if you drop a glass on your kitchen floor, there’s some large pieces and there are some very, very tiny pieces,” Babb said. “These little tiny pieces are the ones that can get wafted up in that steam plume.” Scientists call the glass Limu O Pele, or Pele’s seaweed, named after the Hawaiian goddess of volcano and fire.

WHY IS IT DANGEROUS?

The clouds contain hydrochlor­ic acid, which is about as corrosive as diluted battery acid. It can irritate the skin and eyes and cause breathing problems. Babb says protective masks that officials have been distributi­ng to protect people from volcanic ash will filter particles from lava haze but not the hydrochlor­ic acid. Laze itself is not enough to cause serious burns, Babb said, unless someone is right on top of where lava enters the ocean. Waves also can wash over molten lava and send scalding water onshore, so people should maintain a safe distance. No major injuries have been reported from lava haze.

WHO NEEDS TO BE CONCERNED ABOUT IT?

Mostly people who are near the lava entry on the southern coast, either on land or in boats just offshore. Where the plume wafts depends heavily on wind direction and speed. The gas clouds initially appear on the shoreline, but trade winds on Sunday carried plumes about 24 kilometres to the southwest. The cloud was offshore, running parallel to the coast. When the winds die down, the plume can flatten out. Its size, meanwhile, depends on the volume of lava falling into the sea. The hazards minimize once the shards fall to the ground because the glass would mix with the earth.

 ?? US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY / AFP PHOTO ?? Lava spatters from Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano on Monday, where authoritie­s have warned of dangerous “laze” fumes — which contain hydrochlor­ic acid and tiny shards of glass — as molten lava from the erupting volcano reaches the ocean.
US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY / AFP PHOTO Lava spatters from Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano on Monday, where authoritie­s have warned of dangerous “laze” fumes — which contain hydrochlor­ic acid and tiny shards of glass — as molten lava from the erupting volcano reaches the ocean.

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