Santa Fe New Mexican

More homes destroyed

- By Caleb Jones, Jennifer Peltz and Sophia Yan Associated Press

PAHOA, Hawaii — The number of homes destroyed by Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano climbed to nine Sunday as scientists reported lava spewing more than 200 feet into the air, and some of the more than 1,700 people who evacuated prepared for the possibilit­y they may not return for quite some time.

Hawaii officials said the decimated homes were in the Leilani Estates subdivisio­n, where molten rock, toxic gas and steam have been bursting through openings in the ground created by the Kilauea volcano. Glowing plumes of lava have shot hundreds of feet into the air, officials said, and black-and-orange ribbons of rock have curled into roadways.

And there’s no telling when it might stop, or how far it might reach.

“There’s more magma in the system to be erupted. As long as that supply is there, the eruption will continue,” U.S. Geological Survey volcanolog­ist Wendy Stovall said Sunday morning.

Or, as traditiona­l Hawaiian belief would have it, it all depends on Pele, the volcano goddess. Folklore says she resides in Kilauea, and Native Hawaiians aren’t the only residents who bring her up.

“You have to ask Pele,” Steve Clapper said when asked whether he had any idea when he’d return to his Leilani Estates home.

Clapper had to pile his ailing 88-year-old mother into a car and leave shortly after hearing an ominous rumbling behind the house.

He believes he saw its roof still standing in photos of the area but can’t be sure. Still, the California native was sanguine as he assessed his situation.

“What can you do? You have no control over it,” Clapper said as he started his day at a nearby evacuation shelter. “Pele’s the boss, you know?”

Cherie McArthur wondered what would become of her macadamia nut farm in Lanipuna Gardens, another evacuated neighborho­od near Leilani Estates. One of the year’s first harvests had been planned for this weekend.

“If we lose our farm, we don’t know where we’re going to go. You lose your income and you lose your home at the same time,” said McArthur, who’s had the farm for about 20 years. “All you can do is pray and hope and try to get all the informatio­n you can.”

 ?? U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY VIA AP ?? A new fissure erupts in Leilani Estates on Saturday in Pahoa, Hawaii. The erupting Kilauea volcano has destroyed homes and forced the evacuation­s of more than a thousand people.
U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY VIA AP A new fissure erupts in Leilani Estates on Saturday in Pahoa, Hawaii. The erupting Kilauea volcano has destroyed homes and forced the evacuation­s of more than a thousand people.

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