Boston Herald

More evacuation­s as Hawaii lava flow gets hotter, faster

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HONOLULU — The hottest and fastest-moving lava of Kilauea volcano’s latest eruption spread across new parts of the Big Island this week, forcing officials to order evacuation­s in two coastal neighborho­ods over fears that the rapidly advancing flows could cut off dwindling escape routes.

Overnight Wednesday, the lava was moving fast enough to cover about six football fields an hour, according to U.S. Geological Survey scientist Wendy Stovall.

“Hawaii County Civil Defense decided to evacuate all of lower Puna to ensure that people would be able to get out,” Stovall said.

Lava gushed across and then along a roadway that leads from the commercial center of Pahoa toward smaller towns and rural farmlands to the east.

About two dozen recent fissures in that area have created towering lava fountains and bone-rattling explosions throughout the eruption. The lava that is currently coming to the surface is the hottest and most fluid to date.

“This is the hottest lava that we’ve seen in this eruption, even just a matter of 50 degrees centigrade makes a big difference in how quickly lava flows can move and how they behave once the magma exits the vent,” Stovall said.

In fact, the current lava eruptions in Puna are as hot as Hawaii’s lava will ever get. “It can’t get hotter than where we are,” Stovall added. “We are pretty much tapping mantle temperatur­es right now.”

One fissure was observed early Wednesday morning spouting lava over 200 feet into the air.

Hawaii County officials said lava destroyed the electric utility’s equipment on the highway, which knocked out power to Vacationla­nd and Kapoho Beach Lots.

“You are at risk of being isolated due to possible lava inundation,” the Hawaii County Civil Defense agency advised the public.

There were several small earthquake­s at Kilauea’s summit, where the vent inside the volcano’s Halemaumau Crater has grown along with a series of explosive eruptions that have sent rock and ash thousands of feet into the sky.

The U.S. Geological Survey released drone footage of another fast-moving lava flow that trapped a man in Leilani Estates over the weekend. As lava rushed past the property, a USGS crew that was flying the drone used the aircraft to lead rescue teams to the stranded person. The person was safely evacuated.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? HOT STUFF: Lava flows near Pahoa, Hawaii, on Wednesday in this aerial photo provided by the U.S. Geological Survey.
AP PHOTO HOT STUFF: Lava flows near Pahoa, Hawaii, on Wednesday in this aerial photo provided by the U.S. Geological Survey.

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