The Palm Beach Post

What's happening inside Hawaii's Kilauea?

- By Sarah Kaplan

Sputtering lava, strong earthquake­s and toxic gas jolted the southern part of the Big Island of Hawaii as magma shifted underneath a restless Kilauea volcano. The trifecta of natural threats forced stressed-out residents to evacuate and prompted the closure of parks and college campuses on Friday. Multiple new vents, from which lava is spurting out of the ground, formed in the same residentia­l neighborho­od where molten rock first emerged Thursday. At midday, a magnitude 6.9 earthquake struck — the biggest of hundreds of quakes this week and the largest to strike the state in 43 years. Residents were also warned to watch out for dangerous levels of sulfuric gas. This is the latest in an ongoing eruption that dates back more than three decades. Lava has been spilling out of Puu Oo crater since 1983, making Kilauea the world’s longest continuous­ly erupting volcano.

How old is the volcano?

Kilauea is also the youngest of Hawaii’s abovegroun­d volcanoes, which have formed over the course of the past 5 million years as the Pacific plate drifts over a hot spot in Earth’s mantle. It features two main craters — one at the summit, Halema’uma’u, and Puu Oo, on the eastern flank. In recent years, eruptions have alternated between the two.

Like many Hawaiian volcanoes, Kilauea is made of basalt, a type of lava that flows very easily. Rather than building up into a steep, towering peak like Krakatau in Indonesia or Mount St. Helens in Washington state, the fluid rock at Kilauea creates a broad, shallow dome known as a shield volcano.

Shield volcanoes “are really voluminous, the largest volcanoes on Earth, but because they have those long, low-angle slopes, they’re not very dramatic,” said Tari Mattox, a geologist who worked at the Hawaii Volcano Observator­y for six years. “People are surprised when they go to Hawaii and they say, ‘Where’s the volcano?’ And I tell them, ‘You’re standing on it!’ ”

What is lava?

This fluid lava makes for effusive — rather than explosive — eruptions. Indeed, the volcano’s name means “spewing” or “much spreading,” according to Hawaii magazine. Rocks moving upward through the mantle beneath Hawaii begin to melt about 50 miles beneath the surface. That magma is less dense than the surroundin­g rock, so it continues to rise until it “ponds” in a reservoir that’s roughly three miles wide and one to four miles beneath the summit. As pressure builds in the magma chamber, the magma seeks out weak spots in the surroundin­g rock, squeezing through the earth until it reaches a vent to

the surface.

Since the current eruption began in

1983, the U.S. Geological Survey has documented 61 eruptive episodes at multiple vents along the East Rift Zone, one of

Kilauea’s weak spots. The flows have submerged houses and roads under rivers of molten rock, and surging “fountains” of lava have occasional­ly sent rock fragments raining down on the landscape. According to Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, the current eruption of Kilauea produces as much as 650,000 cubic yards of new rock every day — enough to resurface a two-lane road 20 miles long. The eruption has added about 500 acres of new land to Hawaii’s

Big Island.

In 1990, a natural tunnel formed by flowing lava broke, sending it streaming into the community of Kalapana. By the end of the year, a church, a store and 100 homes were buried beneath more than 50 feet of

lava, according to the USGS.

Explosive eruptions are rare

Deadly explosive eruptions are rarer. Deposits from Kilauea’s past suggest that violent explosions can occur when water comes in contact with molten rock, flashing into steam. In 1790, a group of warriors was caught in one of these eruptions. From 80 to perhaps hundreds of people were killed; thousands of their footprints are now preserved in ash that hardened into rock.

Several people have died on the volcano in recent years. In February, a tour guide collapsed while viewing an active lava flow,

Hawaii News Now reported. Authoritie­s said he may have inhaled toxic steam that formed when recent rain reacted with sulfur gases in the molten rock.

Kilauea is one of the most closely observed volcanoes in the world, Mattox said. Some five dozen seismic monitoring stations dot its surface, listening for the rumblings of magma breaking through rock. Tiltmeters and GPS stations on the ground and radar satellites in the sky are used to monitor the mountain’s movements — rising magma can cause the volcano to swell like a balloon. As gases dissolved in the molten rock are released into the air, they’re detected by on-site and space-borne instrument­s.

‘Give us warning’

“Volcanoes give us warning when they’re about to do something,” Mattox said. The emptying of the Puu Oo crater’s lava lake, the surge in seismic activity along the East Rift Zone, and weeks of uplift around the crater all signaled that something was bubbling under the surface.

But it was unusual that the new fissures opened up so far from the main vent at

Puu Oo.

Sally Sennert, a USGS volcanolog­ist embedded at the Smithsonia­n’s Global Volcanism Program, said there may have been a blockage in the magma’s usual path to the surface, diverting the molten rock in a different direction along the East Rift Zone. “Magma is going to look for the easiest way out,” she said.

Sennert, who writes the agency’s weekly volcanic activity report and has been monitoring the situation at Kilauea, compared prediction­s about volcanic activity to tornado forecastin­g. “Scientists can look at changes in seismicity and deformatio­n, and they can tell that something might happen. But they can’t tell the exact pathway of the magma or how long it’s going to last,” she said.

The Hawaii Volcano Observator­y had issued “watch” alerts for Kilauea since at least April 24. The alert level indicated that the volcano exhibited heightened unrest and increased potential for eruption. On Thursday, the alert level was changed to “warning,” meaning a hazardous eruption is underway.

According to the most recent alert from the observator­y, “the opening phases of fissure eruptions are dynamic and uncertain.”

The alert said, “It is not possible at this time to say when and where new vents may occur.”

 ?? U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY VIA AP ?? A plume of ash rises from the Puu Oo vent on Hawaii’s Kilaueaa volcano Thursday in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.
U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY VIA AP A plume of ash rises from the Puu Oo vent on Hawaii’s Kilaueaa volcano Thursday in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.

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