Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Water found in volcano’s crater

Scientists wonder if explosive period is next for Kilauea

- CALEB JONES

HONOLULU — For the first time in recorded history, a pond of water has been discovered inside the summit crater of Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano, a developmen­t that scientists say could signal a shift to a more explosive phase of future eruptions.

After a week of questions about a mysterious green patch at the bottom of the volcano’s Halemaumau crater, the former home of a famed lava lake, researcher­s confirmed the presence of water on Thursday, officials with the U.S. Geological Survey told The Associated Press on Friday.

“The question is what does this mean in the evolution of the volcano?” agency scientist emeritus Don Swanson said.

Halemaumau has never had water since written observatio­ns began, he said, so the pond is unusual.

Scientists aren’t certain what will happen next, but when lava interacts with water, it can cause explosive eruptions.

One possibilit­y is that lava could slowly heat up the groundwate­r and eventually create a new lava lake, Swanson said. Lava could also interact with the water table and create small explosions.

“The other possibilit­y is that magma rises rapidly,” Swanson said. “That could produce a larger explosion.”

Scientific agency officials stressed that there is currently “no reason to think hazards at the summit have increased or decreased” because of the discovery of water.

But Swanson said in June that the presence of water could be a significan­t switch in the long-term activity of the volcano.

Kilauea has a history of alternatin­g between long periods of explosive eruptions and times of slower, so-called effusive phases.

Explosive periods are exactly what they sound like, centuries of huge explosions that send hot debris racing down the hillsides and towering columns of rock and ash high into the atmosphere.

Effusive periods, which Kilauea has been in for about 200 years, are marked by slower, steady lava flows that — in comparison — trickle out of the ground.

The next explosive period, researcher­s believe, will be preceded by a collapse of Kilauea’s caldera floor.

An eruption that was ongoing for more than 30 years came to a dramatic end last year when lava exploded from Kilauea’s flank and covered a huge swath of land, destroying hundreds of homes in one of the largest eruptions in recent history.

That eruption came with a significan­t drop of the caldera floor. Halemaumau crater collapsed nearly 2,000 feet over the course of several months, but Swanson said he would expect a larger, “sort of wholesale collapse of the caldera floor” to trigger a prolonged explosive period.

“If it really is a transition, then there will have to be repeated collapses, ever-deepening the caldera floor, before we would get into one of these larger-scale events,” Swanson said.

Swanson said that while researcher­s have never observed water on the caldera floor before, there are Native Hawaiian chants that describe the presence of ponds appearing just before explosive events.

“It’s really not scientific evidence, but it nonetheles­s enhances the interpreta­tion,” Swanson said.

Researcher­s have data going back about 2,500 years that show this transition between explosive and effusive stages.

“We know from mapping the deposits and studying them that there have been several of those [explosive] events between about 1,500 and 1,790 and several events between about 200 B.C. and 1,000 A.D.,” Swanson said. “Kilauea is the only volcano for which we’ve recognized these cycles so far, and I think that’s because it’s been so intensivel­y studied.”

These long periods are marked by large explosions that occur every few decades — or even centuries — with smaller explosions in between, Swanson said. And while explosive eruptions don’t normally feature fast-moving lava flows or huge fountains of molten rock, they are still very dangerous.

Swanson said big explosive eruptions commonly produce pyroclasti­c surges — walls of hot air, ash and rock. In 1790, one such eruption killed a large number of people at Kilauea’s caldera, Swanson said.

“These surges can move at hurricane velocity across the landscape, and they are among the most dangerous kinds of eruptions,” he said.

Swanson said none of this will happen overnight and that he hopes modern monitoring techniques will give the public plenty of warning.

“I’ve been stressing that the current activity at Kilauea, or lack thereof, can go either way,” Swanson said. “We can either return to what was going on before, or this could be the preamble to some more significan­t change in the volcano that leads to explosive activity.”

 ?? AP/U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observator­y/S. CONWAY ?? A pond of water sits in the lowest point of Kilauea volcano’s Halemaumau Crater in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, raising questions about what that means for the volcano.
AP/U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observator­y/S. CONWAY A pond of water sits in the lowest point of Kilauea volcano’s Halemaumau Crater in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, raising questions about what that means for the volcano.

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